Published June 27, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Increasing adult density compromises survival following bacterial infections in Drosophila melanogaster

  • 1. Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali

Description

The density-dependent prophylaxis hypothesis predicts that risk of pathogen transmission increases with increase in population density, and in response to this, organisms mount a prophylactic immune response when exposed to high density. This prophylactic response is expected to help organisms improve their chances of survival when exposed to pathogens. Alternatively, organisms living at high densities can exhibit compromised defense against pathogens due to lack of resources and density associated physiological stress; the crowding stress hypothesis. We housed adult Drosophila melanogaster flies at different densities and measured the effect this has on their post-infection survival and resistance to starvation. We find that flies housed at higher densities show greater mortality after being infected with bacterial pathogens, while also exhibiting increased resistance to starvation. Our results are more in line with the density-stress hypothesis that postulates a compromised immune system when hosts are subjected to high densities.

Notes

DATA & FILE OVERVIEW

File Name:"Adult_density_experiment.xlsx"

Note: This file contains five separate tabs:

Tab 1. "key" (description of individual data sheet contents)

Tab 2. "EnterococcusA" (data from immune assay comparing 8 adults vs. 32 adults density treatments using Enterococcus faecalis)

Tab 3. "EnterococcusB" (data from immune assay comparing 50 adults vs. 200 adults density treatments using Enterococcus faecalis)

Tab 4. "ErwiniaA" (data from immune assay comparing 8 adults vs. 32 adults density treatments using Erwinia c carotovora)

Tab 5. "ErwiniaB" (data from immune assay comparing 50 adults vs. 200 adults density treatments using Erwinia c carotovora)

Tab 6. "StarvationA" (data from starvation assay comparing 8 adults vs. 32 adults density treatments)

Tab 7. "StarvationB" (data from starvation assay comparing 50 adults vs. 200 adults density treatments)

Funding provided by: Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100011652
Award Number:

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