Journal
GENETICS
Volume 181, Issue 4, Pages 1451-1465Publisher
GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.108.099044
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Funding
- National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Center for InsectScience at the University of Arizona
- NSF Integrative Graduate Education
- American Association of University Women
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Protein components of the Drosophila male ejaculate, several of which evolve rapidly, are critical modulators of reproductive success. Recent studies of female reproductive tract proteins indicate they also are extremely divergent between species, suggesting that reproductive molecules may coevolve between the sexes. Our current understanding of intersexual coevolution, however, is severely limited by the paucity of genetic and evolutionary studies on the female Molecules involved. Physiological evidence of ejaculate-female coadaptation, paired with a promiscuous mating system, makes Drosophila mojavensis ail exciting model system in which to study the evolution of reproductive proteins. Here we explore the evolutionary dynamics of a five-paralog gene family of female reproductive proteases within populations of D. mojavensis and throughout the repleta species group. We show that the proteins have experienced ongoing gene duplication and adaptive evolution and further exhibit dynamic patterns of pseudogenation, copy number variation, gene conversion, and selection within geographically isolated Populations of D. mojavensis. The integration of these patterns in a single gene family has never before been documented in a reproductive protein.
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