4.5 Article

The diverse effects of phenotypic dominance on hybrid fitness

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 76, Issue 12, Pages 2846-2863

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14645

Keywords

Darwin's corollary; Fisher's geometric model; heterosis; haldane's rule; optimal outbreeding; speciation

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust PhD programme in Mathematical Genomics and Medicine [RG92770]
  2. UBC International Work Learn Award
  3. Karen McKellin International Leader of Tomorrow Award
  4. NSERC Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS-D)
  5. UBC Four Year Fellowship
  6. Killam Doctoral Scholarship
  7. British Columbia Graduate Scholarship

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When divergent populations interbreed, their alleles are brought together in hybrids. Dominance effects can influence F1 fitness, leading to a decline in hybrid fitness and violation of Haldane's Rule. However, dominance can also result in lucky beneficial effects and strengthen Darwin's Corollary. The effects of dominance on hybrid fitness can be difficult to isolate but can explain environment-dependent heterosis.
When divergent populations interbreed, their alleles are brought together in hybrids. In the initial F1 cross, most divergent loci are heterozygous. Therefore, F1 fitness can be influenced by dominance effects that could not have been selected to function well together. We present a systematic study of these F1 dominance effects by introducing variable phenotypic dominance into Fisher's geometric model. We show that dominance often reduces hybrid fitness, which can generate optimal outbreeding followed by a steady decline in F1 fitness, as is often observed. We also show that lucky beneficial effects sometimes arise by chance, which might be important when hybrids can access novel environments. We then show that dominance can lead to violations of Haldane's Rule (reduced fitness of the heterogametic F1) but strengthens Darwin's Corollary (F1 fitness differences between cross directions). Taken together, results show that the effects of dominance on hybrid fitness can be surprisingly difficult to isolate, because they often resemble the effects of uniparental inheritance or expression. Nevertheless, we identify a pattern of environment-dependent heterosis that only dominance can explain, and for which there is some suggestive evidence. Our results also show how existing data set upper bounds on the size of dominance effects. These bounds could explain why additive models often provide good predictions for later-generation recombinant hybrids, even when dominance qualitatively changes outcomes for the F1.

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