4.7 Article

Genetic assimilation and the evolution of direction of genital asymmetry in anablepid fishes

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0266

Keywords

Anableps; antisymmetry; gonopodium; Jenynsia; time-calibrated phylogeny

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [TO914/2-1, ME2752/27-1]
  2. Zukunftskolleg, Konstanz
  3. Hector Fellow Academy
  4. European Research Council-Advanced Grant (ERC 'GenAdap') [293700]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [293700] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Phylogenetic comparative studies suggest that the deviation from bilateral symmetry might evolve through genetic assimilation, but the changes in its inheritance are largely unknown. Research on the evolution of genital asymmetry in Anablepidae fish reveals that the bias towards left-sided males has likely evolved independently three times. Breeding experiments show that regardless of their own sidedness, male fish sire more left-sided offspring. This suggests that sidedness may be inherited as a threshold trait with different thresholds across species.
Phylogenetic comparative studies suggest that the direction of deviation from bilateral symmetry (sidedness) might evolve through genetic assimilation; however, the changes in sidedness inheritance remain largely unknown. We investigated the evolution of genital asymmetry in fish of the family Anablepidae, in which males' intromittent organ (the gonopodium, a modified anal fin) bends asymmetrically to the left or the right. In most species, males show a 1 : 1 ratio of left-to-right-sided gonopodia. However, we found that in three species left-sided males are significantly more abundant than right-sided ones. We mapped sidedness onto a new molecular phylogeny, finding that this left-sided bias likely evolved independently three times. Our breeding experiment in a species with an excess of left-sided males showed that sires produced more left-sided offspring independently of their own sidedness. We propose that sidedness might be inherited as a threshold trait, with different thresholds across species. This resolves the apparent paradox that, while there is evidence for the evolution of sidedness, commonly there is a lack of support for its heritability and no response to artificial selection. Focusing on the heritability of the left : right ratio of offspring, rather than on individual sidedness, is key for understanding how the direction of asymmetry becomes genetically assimilated.

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