Genetic Architecture and the Evolution of Sex

被引:19
|
作者
Lohaus, Rolf [1 ]
Burch, Christina L. [2 ]
Azevedo, Ricardo B. R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Houston, Dept Biol & Biochem, Houston, TX 77204 USA
[2] Univ N Carolina, Dept Biol, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
canalization; directional epistasis; gene regulatory networks; recombination load; robustness; DELETERIOUS MUTATIONS; BENEFICIAL MUTATIONS; FINITE POPULATIONS; RNA VIRUS; RECOMBINATION; SELECTION; EPISTASIS; FITNESS; REPRODUCTION; VARIABILITY;
D O I
10.1093/jhered/esq013
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Theoretical investigations of the advantages of sex have tended to treat the genetic architecture of organisms as static and have not considered that genetic architecture might coevolve with reproductive mode. As a result, some potential advantages of sex may have been missed. Using a gene network model, we recently showed that recombination imposes selection for robustness to mutation and that negative epistasis can evolve as a by-product of this selection. These results motivated a detailed exploration of the mutational deterministic hypothesis, a hypothesis in which the advantage of sex depends critically on epistasis. We found that sexual populations do evolve higher mean fitness and lower genetic load than asexual populations at equilibrium, and, under moderate stabilizing selection and large population size, these equilibrium sexual populations resist invasion by asexuals. However, we found no evidence that these long-and short-term advantages to sex were explained by the negative epistasis that evolved in our experiments. The long-term advantage of sex was that sexual populations evolved a lower deleterious mutation rate, but this property was not sufficient to account for the ability of sexual populations to resist invasion by asexuals. The ability to resist asexual invasion was acquired simultaneously with an increase in recombinational robustness that minimized the cost of sex. These observations provide the first direct evidence that sexual reproduction does indeed select for conditions that favor its own maintenance. Furthermore, our results highlight the importance of considering a dynamic view of the genetic architecture to understand the evolution of sex and recombination.
引用
收藏
页码:S142 / S157
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Evolution and genetic architecture of sex-limited polymorphism in cuckoos
    Merondun, Justin
    Marques, Cristiana I.
    Andrade, Pedro
    Meshcheryagina, Swetlana
    Galvan, Ismael
    Afonso, Sandra
    Alves, Joel M.
    Araujo, Pedro M.
    Bachurin, Gennadiy
    Balacco, Jennifer
    Ban, Miklos
    Fedrigo, Olivier
    Formenti, Giulio
    Fossoy, Frode
    Fulop, Attila
    Golovatin, Mikhail
    Granja, Sofia
    Hewson, Chris
    Honza, Marcel
    Howe, Kerstin
    Larson, Greger
    Marton, Attila
    Moskat, Csaba
    Mountcastle, Jacquelyn
    Prochazka, Petr
    Red'kin, Yaroslav
    Sims, Ying
    Sulc, Michal
    Tracey, Alan
    Wood, Jonathan M. D.
    Jarvis, Erich D.
    Hauber, Mark E.
    Carneiro, Miguel
    Wolf, Jochen B. W.
    SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2024, 10 (17):
  • [2] The evolution of genetic architecture
    Hansen, Thomas F.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS, 2006, 37 : 123 - 157
  • [3] Change of genetic architecture in response to sex
    Deng, HW
    Lynch, M
    GENETICS, 1996, 143 (01) : 203 - 212
  • [4] Sex differences in the genetic architecture of depression
    Hee-Ju Kang
    Yoomi Park
    Kyung-Hun Yoo
    Ki-Tae Kim
    Eun-Song Kim
    Ju-Wan Kim
    Sung-Wan Kim
    Il-Seon Shin
    Jin-Sang Yoon
    Ju Han Kim
    Jae-Min Kim
    Scientific Reports, 10
  • [5] Sex differences in the genetic architecture of depression
    Kang, Hee-Ju
    Park, Yoomi
    Yoo, Kyung-Hun
    Kim, Ki-Tae
    Kim, Eun-Song
    Kim, Ju-Wan
    Kim, Sung-Wan
    Shin, Il-Seon
    Yoon, Jin-Sang
    Kim, Ju Han
    Kim, Jae-Min
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [6] ON GENETIC SEGREGATION AND THE EVOLUTION OF SEX
    WIENER, P
    FELDMAN, MW
    OTTO, SP
    EVOLUTION, 1992, 46 (03) : 775 - 782
  • [7] GENETIC ARCHITECTURE, GENETIC BEHAVIOR, AND CHARACTER EVOLUTION
    MORENO, G
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 1994, 25 : 31 - 44
  • [8] Rapid sex-specific evolution of age at maturity is shaped by genetic architecture in Atlantic salmon
    Czorlich, Yann
    Aykanat, Tutku
    Erkinaro, Jaakko
    Orell, Panu
    Primmer, Craig Robert
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2018, 2 (11): : 1800 - 1807
  • [9] Rapid Evolution of Lifespan in a Novel Environment: Sex-Specific Responses and Underlying Genetic Architecture
    Charles W. Fox
    James D. Wagner
    Sara Cline
    Frances Ann Thomas
    Frank J. Messina
    Evolutionary Biology, 2011, 38 : 182 - 196
  • [10] Evolution of sex-specific pace-of-life syndromes: genetic architecture and physiological mechanisms
    Immonen, Elina
    Hamalainen, Anni
    Schuett, Wiebke
    Tarka, Maja
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2018, 72 (03)