4.8 Article

Demographic Signatures Accompanying the Evolution of Selfing in Leavenworthia alabamica

期刊

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 28, 期 5, 页码 1717-1729

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msq352

关键词

automatic selection; reproductive assurance; self-incompatibility; population bottlenecks; SCR; SRK

资金

  1. McGill University
  2. School of Biological Sciences
  3. College of Sciences at Washington State University
  4. NSERC

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The evolution of selfing from outcrossing is a common transition, yet little is known about the mutations and selective factors that promote this shift. In the mustard family, single-locus self-incompatibility (SI) enforces outcrossing. In this study, we test whether mutations causing self-compatibility (SC) are linked to the self-incompatibility locus (S-locus) in Leavenworthia alabamica, a species where two selfing races (a2 and a4) co-occur with outcrossing populations. We also infer the ecological circumstances associated with origins of selfing using molecular sequence data. Genealogical reconstruction of the Lal2 locus, the putative ortholog of the SRK locus, showed that both selfing races are fixed for one of two different S-linked Lal2 sequences, whereas outcrossing populations harbor many S-alleles. Hybrid crosses demonstrated that S-linked mutations cause SC in each selfing race. These results strongly suggest two origins of selfing in this species, a result supported by population admixture analysis of 16 microsatellite loci and by a population tree built from eight nuclear loci. One selfing race (a4) shows signs of a severe population bottleneck, suggesting that reproductive assurance might have caused the evolution of selfing in this case. In contrast, the population size of race a2 cannot be distinguished from that of outcrossing populations after correcting for differences in selfing rates. Coalescent-based analyses suggest a relatively old origin of selfing in the a4 race (similar to 150 ka ago), whereas selfing evolved recently in the a2 race (similar to 12-48 ka ago). These results imply that S-locus mutations have triggered two recent shifts to selfing in L. alabamica, but that these transitions are not always associated with a severe population bottleneck, suggesting that factors other than reproductive assurance may play a role in its evolution.

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