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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas K. Priest is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas K. Priest.


Evolution | 2002

THE ROLE OF PARENTAL AGE EFFECTS ON THE EVOLUTION OF AGING

Nicholas K. Priest; Benjamin Mackowiak; Daniel E. L. Promislow

Abstract Any studies have found that older parents have shorter‐lived offspring. However, the evolutionary significance of these findings is poorly understood. We carried out large‐scale demographic experiments to examine the direct effect of maternal age and paternal age on offspring aging in inbred and outbred strains of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. We found that the age of mothers and, to a lesser extent, the age of fathers can have a large influence on both offspring longevity and the shape of the age‐specific mortality trajectory. In two independent experiments we found that older mothers generally produced shorter‐lived offspring, although the exact effect of maternal age on offspring longevity differed among strains. These results suggest that maternal age effects on progeny aging may influence the evolution of aging.


The American Naturalist | 2001

Negligible Senescence during Reproductive Dormancy in Drosophila melanogaster

Marc Tatar; Susan A. Chien; Nicholas K. Priest

Some endemic Drosophila overwinter in a state of adult reproductive diapause where egg maturation is arrested in previtellogenic stages. When maintained at cool temperatures, adult Drosophila melanogaster enter reproductive dormancy, that is, diapause or diapause‐like quiescence. The ability to survive for extended periods is a typical feature of diapause syndromes. In adults this somatic persistence may involve reduced or slowed senescence. Here we assess whether reproductively dormant D. melanogaster age at slow rates. Adults were exposed to dormancy‐inducing conditions for 3, 6, or 9 wk. After this period, demographic parameters were measured under normal conditions and compared to the demography of newly eclosed cohorts. The age‐specific mortality rates of postdormancy adults were essentially identical to the mortality rates of newly eclosed, young flies. Postdormancy reproduction, in contrast, declined with the duration of the treatment; somatic survival during dormancy may tradeoff with later reproduction. Adults in reproductive dormancy were highly resistant to heat and to oxidative stress. Suppressed synthesis of juvenile hormone is known to regulate reproductive diapause of many insects. Treatment of dormant D. melanogaster with a juvenile hormone analog restored vitellogenesis, suppressed stress resistance, and increased demographic senescence. We conclude that D. melanogaster age at slow rates as part of their reproductive dormancy syndrome; the data do not agree with an alternative hypothesis based on heat‐dependent “rate of living.” We suggest that low temperature reduces neuroendocrine function, which in turn slows senescence as a function of altered stress response, nutrient reallocation, and metabolism.


Genome Research | 2014

Predicting the virulence of MRSA from its genome sequence

Maisem Laabei; Mario Recker; Justine K. Rudkin; Mona Aldeljawi; Zeynep Gülay; Tim J. Sloan; Paul Williams; Jennifer L. Endres; Kenneth W. Bayles; Paul D. Fey; Vijaya Kumar Yajjala; Todd J. Widhelm; Erica Hawkins; Katie Lewis; Sara Parfett; Lucy Scowen; Sharon J. Peacock; Matthew T. G. Holden; Daniel J. Wilson; Timothy D. Read; Jean van den Elsen; Nicholas K. Priest; Edward J. Feil; Laurence D. Hurst; Elisabet Josefsson; Ruth C. Massey

Microbial virulence is a complex and often multifactorial phenotype, intricately linked to a pathogens evolutionary trajectory. Toxicity, the ability to destroy host cell membranes, and adhesion, the ability to adhere to human tissues, are the major virulence factors of many bacterial pathogens, including Staphylococcus aureus. Here, we assayed the toxicity and adhesiveness of 90 MRSA (methicillin resistant S. aureus) isolates and found that while there was remarkably little variation in adhesion, toxicity varied by over an order of magnitude between isolates, suggesting different evolutionary selection pressures acting on these two traits. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and identified a large number of loci, as well as a putative network of epistatically interacting loci, that significantly associated with toxicity. Despite this apparent complexity in toxicity regulation, a predictive model based on a set of significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and insertion and deletions events (indels) showed a high degree of accuracy in predicting an isolates toxicity solely from the genetic signature at these sites. Our results thus highlight the potential of using sequence data to determine clinically relevant parameters and have further implications for understanding the microbial virulence of this opportunistic pathogen.


The American Naturalist | 2008

Mating Frequency and Inclusive Fitness in Drosophila melanogaster

Nicholas K. Priest; Laura F. Galloway; Deborah A. Roach

In many species, increased mating frequency reduces maternal survival and reproduction. In order to understand the evolution of mating frequency, we need to determine the consequences of increased mating frequency for offspring. We conducted an experiment in Drosophila melanogaster in which we manipulated the mating frequency of mothers and examined the survival and fecundity of the mothers and their daughters. We found that mothers with the highest mating frequency had accelerated mortality and more rapid reproductive senescence. On average, they had 50% shorter lives and 30% lower lifetime reproductive success (LRS) than did mothers with the lowest mating frequency. However, mothers with the highest mating frequency produced daughters with 28% greater LRS. This finding implies that frequent mating stimulates cross‐generational fitness trade‐offs such that maternal fitness is reduced while offspring fitness is enhanced. We evaluate these results using a demographic metric of inclusive fitness. We show that the costs and benefits of mating frequency depend on the growth rate of the population. In an inclusive fitness context, there was no evidence that increased mating frequency results in fitness costs for mothers. These results indicate that cross‐generational fitness trade‐offs have an important role in sexual selection and life‐history evolution.


Aging Cell | 2015

Sex-specific effects of protein and carbohydrate intake on reproduction but not lifespan in Drosophila melanogaster

Kim Jensen; Colin D. McClure; Nicholas K. Priest; John Hunt

Modest dietary restriction extends lifespan (LS) in a diverse range of taxa and typically has a larger effect in females than males. Traditionally, this has been attributed to a stronger trade‐off between LS and reproduction in females than in males that is mediated by the intake of calories. Recent studies, however, suggest that it is the intake of specific nutrients that extends LS and mediates this trade‐off. Here, we used the geometric framework (GF) to examine the sex‐specific effects of protein (P) and carbohydrate (C) intake on LS and reproduction in Drosophila melanogaster. We found that LS was maximized at a high intake of C and a low intake of P in both sexes, whereas nutrient intake had divergent effects on reproduction. Male offspring production rate and LS were maximized at the same intake of nutrients, whereas female egg production rate was maximized at a high intake of diets with a P:C ratio of 1:2. This resulted in larger differences in nutrient‐dependent optima for LS and reproduction in females than in males, as well as an optimal intake of nutrients for lifetime reproduction that differed between the sexes. Under dietary choice, the sexes followed similar feeding trajectories regulated around a P:C ratio of 1:4. Consequently, neither sex reached their nutritional optimum for lifetime reproduction, suggesting intralocus sexual conflict over nutrient optimization. Our study shows clear sex differences in the nutritional requirements of reproduction in D. melanogaster and joins the growing list of studies challenging the role of caloric restriction in extending LS.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2012

From genotype to phenotype: can systems biology be used to predict Staphylococcus aureus virulence?

Nicholas K. Priest; Justine K. Rudkin; Edward J. Feil; Jean van den Elsen; Ambrose Cheung; Sharon J. Peacock; Maisem Laabei; David A. Lucks; Mario Recker; Ruth C. Massey

With the advent of high-throughput whole-genome sequencing, it is now possible to sequence a bacterial genome in a matter of hours. However, although the presence or absence of a particular gene can be determined, we do not yet have the tools to extract information about the true virulence potential of an organism from sequence data alone. Here, we focus on the important human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and present a framework for the construction of a broad systems biology-based tool that could be used to predict virulence phenotypes from S. aureus genomic sequences using existing technology.


Biology Letters | 2008

Cross-generational fitness benefits of mating and male seminal fluid.

Nicholas K. Priest; Deborah A. Roach; Laura F. Galloway

In many species, the physical act of mating and exposure to accessory gland proteins (Acps) in male seminal fluid reduces female survival and offspring production. It is not clear what males gain from harming their sexual partners or why females mate frequently despite being harmed. Using sterile strains of Drosophila melanogaster that differ in their production of Acps, we found that both the physical act of mating and exposure to male seminal fluid in mothers increase the fitness of daughters. We show that the changes in daughter fitness are mediated by parental effects, not by sexual selection involving good genes or owing to variation in maternal egg production. These results support the idea that male harm of females might partly evolve through cross-generational fitness benefits.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2003

Female age and sperm competition: last-male precedence declines as female age increases

Paul D. Mack; Nicholas K. Priest; Daniel E. L. Promislow

Until very recently, most studies of sperm competition have focused on variation in male competitive ability. However, we now know that a number of reproductive traits, including oviposition rate, use of stored sperm and receptivity to mating, vary with female condition. Because females can play an active part in the movement of sperm within their reproductive tract, sperm competition may be influenced by female condition. Existing studies of sperm competition in fruitflies ignore the effects of female condition, using females that are 3–4 days old and in their reproductive prime. But condition will decline as a female senesces. Here, we examine the effect of female age on the outcome of sperm competition in three strains of the fruitfly, Drosophila melanogaster. Previous studies have shown that female age influences preference for mates and male ejaculation strategies. In this study, we find that when males are mated to females that are older than 17 days, last–male sperm precedence decreases significantly. These results could lead to a greater understanding of the physiological mechanisms that regulate the outcome of sperm competition.


Evolution | 2014

HORMESIS RESULTS IN TRADE‐OFFS WITH IMMUNITY

Colin D. McClure; Weihao Zhong; Vicky L. Hunt; Fiona M. Chapman; Fiona V. Hill; Nicholas K. Priest

Many have argued that we may be able to extend life and improve human health through hormesis, the beneficial effects of low‐level toxins and other stressors. But, studies of hormesis in model systems have not yet established whether stress‐induced benefits are cost free, artifacts of inbreeding, or come with deleterious side effects. Here, we provide evidence that hormesis results in trade‐offs with immunity. We find that a single topical dose of dead spores of the entomopathogenic fungus, Metarhizium robertsii, increases the longevity of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, without significant decreases in fecundity. We find that hormetic benefits of pathogen challenge are greater in lines that lack key components of antifungal immunity (Dif and Turandot M). And, in outbred fly lines, we find that topical pathogen challenge enhances both survival and fecundity, but reduces ability to fight off live infections. The results provide evidence that hormesis is manifested by stress‐induced trade‐offs with immunity, not cost‐free benefits or artifacts of inbreeding. Our findings illuminate mechanisms underlying pathogen‐induced life‐history trade‐offs, and indicate that reduced immune function may be an ironic side effect of the “elixirs of life.”


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2013

Immune anticipation of mating in Drosophila: Turandot M promotes immunity against sexually transmitted fungal infections

Weihao Zhong; Colin D. McClure; Cara R. Evans; David T. Mlynski; Elina Immonen; Michael G. Ritchie; Nicholas K. Priest

Although it is well known that mating increases the risk of infection, we do not know how females mitigate the fitness costs of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). It has recently been shown that female fruitflies, Drosophila melanogaster, specifically upregulate two members of the Turandot family of immune and stress response genes, Turandot M and Turandot C (TotM and TotC), when they hear male courtship song. Here, we use the Gal4/UAS RNAi gene knockdown system to test whether the expression of these genes provides fitness benefits for females infected with the entomopathogenic fungus, Metarhizium robertsii under sexual transmission. As a control, we also examined the immunity conferred by Dorsal-related immunity factor (Dif), a central component of the Toll signalling pathway thought to provide immunity against fungal infections. We show that TotM, but not TotC or Dif, provides survival benefits to females following STIs, but not after direct topical infections. We also show that though the expression of TotM provides fecundity benefits for healthy females, it comes at a cost to their survival, which helps to explain why TotM is not constitutively expressed. Together, these results show that the anticipatory expression of TotM promotes specific immunity against fungal STIs and suggest that immune anticipation is more common than currently appreciated.

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