Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1906311 | Experimental Gerontology | 2012 | 5 Pages |
Evolutionary theories of aging suggest that trade-offs between longevity and fitness should be found under certain conditions. In C. elegans, there is little evidence for the existence of such trade-offs. We asked if fertility/longevity trade-offs exist in populations of randomly mating males and hermaphrodites. We set up a large population of young males and 5-day-old hermaphrodites that were no longer self-fertile. We then allowed them to mate for one day with an equal number young males and then separated hermaphrodites to individual plates and determined daily fertility of individual hermaphrodites. There was a significant negative relationship between late-life fertility and individual longevity.
► Evolutionary theories predict fertility/longevity trade-offs in certain conditions but little evidence in C. elegans. ► Observed negative trade-offs in randomly mating male/hermaphrodite populations. ► Significant positive relationship between overall fertility and longevity in highly mated hermaphrodites. ► Age mutants show similar patterns of trade-offs.