4.8 Article

Natural variation at a single gene generates sexual antagonism across fitness components in Drosophila

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 14, Pages 3161-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.05.038

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Mutations with conflicting fitness effects in males and females can accumulate in sexual populations, reducing their adaptive capacity. This study focuses on a gene in fruit flies that generates sexual antagonism through its effects on certain traits. These traits, which function as both mate signals and protectors against abiotic stress, have opposing effects on fitness-related functions in different sexes. The study also suggests that balancing selection likely plays a role in maintaining this genetic variation.
Mutations with conflicting fitness effects in males and females accumulate in sexual populations, reducing their adaptive capacity.(1,2) Although quantitative genetic studies indicate that sexually antagonistic polymorphisms are common,(3-5) their molecular basis and population genetic properties remain poorly understood.(6,7) Here, we show in fruit flies how natural variation at a single gene generates sexual antagonism through phenotypic effects on cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) traits that function as both mate signals and protectors against abiotic stress(8) across a latitudinal gradient. Tropical populations of Drosophila serrata have polymorphic CHCs producing sexual antagonism through opposing but sex-limited effects on these two fitness-related functions. We dissected this polymorphism to a single fatty-acyl CoA reductase gene, DsFAR2-B, that is expressed in oenocyte cells where CHCs are synthesized. RNAi-mediated disruption of the DsFAR2-B ortholog in D. melanogaster oenocytes affected CHCs in a similar way to that seen in D. serrata. Population genomic analysis revealed that balancing selection likely operates at the DsFAR2-B locus in the wild. Our study provides insights into the genetic basis of sexual antagonism in nature and connects sexually varying antagonistic selection on phenotypes with balancing selection on genotypes that maintains molecular variation.

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