4.4 Article

Evolutionary Pathways for the Generation of New Self-Incompatibility Haplotypes in a Nonself-Recognition System

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 209, Issue 3, Pages 861-883

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.118.300748

Keywords

self-incompatibility; diversification; balancing selection; inbreeding depression; S-locus F-Box; SRNase

Funding

  1. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) [329960]
  2. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) under European Research Council (ERC) [250152]
  3. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) under Research Executive Agency (REA) grant [291734]

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Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetically based recognition system that functions to prevent self-fertilization and mating among related plants. An enduring puzzle in SI is how the high diversity observed in nature arises and is maintained. Based on the underlying recognition mechanism, SI can be classified into two main groups: self-recognition (SR) and nonself-recognition (NSR). Most work has focused on diversification within SR systems despite expected differences between the two groups in the evolutionary pathways and outcomes of diversification. Here, we use a deterministic population genetic model and stochastic simulations to investigate how novel S-haplotypes evolve in a gametophytic NSR [SRNase/S Locus F-box (SLF)] SI system. For this model, the pathways for diversification involve either the maintenance or breakdown of SI and can vary in the order of mutations of the female (SRNase) and male (SLF) components. We show analytically that diversification can occur with high inbreeding depression and self-pollination, but this varies with evolutionary pathway and level of completeness (which determines the number of potential mating partners in the population), and, in general, is more likely for lower haplotype number. The conditions for diversification are broader in stochastic simulations of finite population size. However, the number of haplotypes observed under high inbreeding and moderate-to-high self-pollination is less than that commonly observed in nature. Diversification was observed through pathways that maintain SI as well as through self-compatible intermediates. Yet the lifespan of diversified haplotypes was sensitive to their level of completeness. By examining diversification in a NSR SI system, this model extends our understanding of the evolution and maintenance of haplotype diversity observed in a recognition system common in flowering plants.

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