4.5 Article

Intrinsic emergence and modulation of sex-specific dominance reversals in threshold traits

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 76, Issue 9, Pages 1924-1941

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14563

Keywords

Liability; sex-specific dominance reversal; sexual antagonism; sexual conflict; sexual dimorphism; threshold trait

Funding

  1. Norwegian Research Council [223257]

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Sex-specific dominance reversals (SSDRs) can simultaneously maintain genetic variation in fitness and resolve sexual conflict, shaping evolutionary outcomes. Recent studies show the possibility of SSDRs in threshold traits, which could promote their emergence. Under certain genetic architectures and competitive reproductive systems, SSDRs can easily emerge in threshold traits. Further research is needed to understand the basis and occurrence of SSDRs in nature, as well as their impact on sexual conflict.
Sex-specific dominance reversals (SSDRs) in fitness-related traits, where heterozygotes' phenotypes resemble those of alternative homozygotes in females versus males, can simultaneously maintain genetic variation in fitness and resolve sexual conflict and thereby shape key evolutionary outcomes. However, the full implications of SSDRs will depend on how they arise and the resulting potential for evolutionary, ecological and environmental modulation. Recent field and laboratory studies have demonstrated SSDRs in threshold(-like) traits with dichotomous or competitive phenotypic outcomes, implying that such traits could promote the emergence of SSDRs. However, such possibilities have not been explicitly examined. I show how phenotypic SSDRs can readily emerge in threshold traits given genetic architectures involving large-effect loci alongside sexual dimorphism in the mean and variance in polygenic liability. I also show how multilocus SSDRs can arise in line-cross experiments, especially given competitive reproductive systems that generate nonlinear fitness outcomes. SSDRs can consequently emerge in threshold(-like) traits as functions of sexual antagonism, sexual dimorphism and reproductive systems, even with purely additive underlying genetic effects. Accordingly, I identify theoretical and empirical advances that are now required to discern the basis and occurrence of SSDRs in nature, probe forms of (co-)evolutionary, ecological and environmental modulation, and evaluate net impacts on sexual conflict.

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