Cargando…

A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males

In recent years, several studies have shown a decline in reproductive success in males in both humans and wildlife. Research on male fertility has largely focused on vertebrates, although invertebrates constitute the vast majority of terrestrial biodiversity. The reduction of their reproductive capa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chirault, Marlène, Lucas, Christophe, Goubault, Marlène, Chevrier, Claude, Bressac, Christophe, Lécureuil, Charlotte
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4373853/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25807005
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120656
_version_ 1782363396980604928
author Chirault, Marlène
Lucas, Christophe
Goubault, Marlène
Chevrier, Claude
Bressac, Christophe
Lécureuil, Charlotte
author_facet Chirault, Marlène
Lucas, Christophe
Goubault, Marlène
Chevrier, Claude
Bressac, Christophe
Lécureuil, Charlotte
author_sort Chirault, Marlène
collection PubMed
description In recent years, several studies have shown a decline in reproductive success in males in both humans and wildlife. Research on male fertility has largely focused on vertebrates, although invertebrates constitute the vast majority of terrestrial biodiversity. The reduction of their reproductive capacities due to environmental stresses can have strong negative ecological impacts, and also dramatic consequences on world food production if it affects the reproductive success of biological control agents, such as parasitic wasps used to control crop pests. Here Nasonia vitripennis, a parasitic wasp of various fly species, was studied to test the effects of 24h-heat stress applied during the first pupal stage on male fertility. Results showed that only primary spermatocytes were present at the first pupal stage in all cysts of the testes. Heat stress caused a delay in spermatogenesis during development and a significant decrease in sperm stock at emergence. Females mated with these heat-stressed males showed a reduce sperm count stored in their spermatheca. Females did not appear to distinguish heat-stressed from control males and did not remate more frequently to compensate for the lack of sperm transferred. As a result, females mated with heat-stressed males produced a suboptimal lifetime offspring sex ratio compared to those mated with control males. This could further impact the population dynamics of this species. N. vitripennis appears to be an interesting biological model to study the mechanisms of subfertility and its consequence on female reproductive strategies and provides new research perspectives in both invertebrates and vertebrates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4373853
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43738532015-03-27 A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males Chirault, Marlène Lucas, Christophe Goubault, Marlène Chevrier, Claude Bressac, Christophe Lécureuil, Charlotte PLoS One Research Article In recent years, several studies have shown a decline in reproductive success in males in both humans and wildlife. Research on male fertility has largely focused on vertebrates, although invertebrates constitute the vast majority of terrestrial biodiversity. The reduction of their reproductive capacities due to environmental stresses can have strong negative ecological impacts, and also dramatic consequences on world food production if it affects the reproductive success of biological control agents, such as parasitic wasps used to control crop pests. Here Nasonia vitripennis, a parasitic wasp of various fly species, was studied to test the effects of 24h-heat stress applied during the first pupal stage on male fertility. Results showed that only primary spermatocytes were present at the first pupal stage in all cysts of the testes. Heat stress caused a delay in spermatogenesis during development and a significant decrease in sperm stock at emergence. Females mated with these heat-stressed males showed a reduce sperm count stored in their spermatheca. Females did not appear to distinguish heat-stressed from control males and did not remate more frequently to compensate for the lack of sperm transferred. As a result, females mated with heat-stressed males produced a suboptimal lifetime offspring sex ratio compared to those mated with control males. This could further impact the population dynamics of this species. N. vitripennis appears to be an interesting biological model to study the mechanisms of subfertility and its consequence on female reproductive strategies and provides new research perspectives in both invertebrates and vertebrates. Public Library of Science 2015-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4373853/ /pubmed/25807005 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120656 Text en © 2015 Chirault et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chirault, Marlène
Lucas, Christophe
Goubault, Marlène
Chevrier, Claude
Bressac, Christophe
Lécureuil, Charlotte
A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title_full A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title_fullStr A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title_full_unstemmed A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title_short A Combined Approach to Heat Stress Effect on Male Fertility in Nasonia vitripennis: From the Physiological Consequences on Spermatogenesis to the Reproductive Adjustment of Females Mated with Stressed Males
title_sort combined approach to heat stress effect on male fertility in nasonia vitripennis: from the physiological consequences on spermatogenesis to the reproductive adjustment of females mated with stressed males
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4373853/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25807005
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120656
work_keys_str_mv AT chiraultmarlene acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT lucaschristophe acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT goubaultmarlene acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT chevrierclaude acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT bressacchristophe acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT lecureuilcharlotte acombinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT chiraultmarlene combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT lucaschristophe combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT goubaultmarlene combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT chevrierclaude combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT bressacchristophe combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales
AT lecureuilcharlotte combinedapproachtoheatstresseffectonmalefertilityinnasoniavitripennisfromthephysiologicalconsequencesonspermatogenesistothereproductiveadjustmentoffemalesmatedwithstressedmales