Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.

Recently diverged species typically have incomplete reproductive barriers, allowing introgression of genetic material from one species into the genomic background of the other. The role of natural selection in preventing or promoting introgression remains contentious. Because of genomic co-adaptatio...

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Main Authors: Vincent Castric, Jesper Bechsgaard, Mikkel H Schierup, Xavier Vekemans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-08-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2517234?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-22350967332d4279a8c037f0f8cfd6ae2020-11-25T01:52:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042008-08-0148e100016810.1371/journal.pgen.1000168Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.Vincent CastricJesper BechsgaardMikkel H SchierupXavier VekemansRecently diverged species typically have incomplete reproductive barriers, allowing introgression of genetic material from one species into the genomic background of the other. The role of natural selection in preventing or promoting introgression remains contentious. Because of genomic co-adaptation, some chromosomal fragments are expected to be selected against in the new background and resist introgression. In contrast, natural selection should favor introgression for alleles at genes evolving under multi-allelic balancing selection, such as the MHC in vertebrates, disease resistance, or self-incompatibility genes in plants. Here, we test the prediction that negative, frequency-dependent selection on alleles at the multi-allelic gene controlling pistil self-incompatibility specificity in two closely related species, Arabidopsis halleri and A. lyrata, caused introgression at this locus at a higher rate than the genomic background. Polymorphism at this gene is largely shared, and we have identified 18 pairs of S-alleles that are only slightly divergent between the two species. For these pairs of S-alleles, divergence at four-fold degenerate sites (K = 0.0193) is about four times lower than the genomic background (K = 0.0743). We demonstrate that this difference cannot be explained by differences in effective population size between the two types of loci. Rather, our data are most consistent with a five-fold increase of introgression rates for S-alleles as compared to the genomic background, making this study the first documented example of adaptive introgression facilitated by balancing selection. We suggest that this process plays an important role in the maintenance of high allelic diversity and divergence at the S-locus in flowering plant families. Because genes under balancing selection are expected to be among the last to stop introgressing, their comparison in closely related species provides a lower-bound estimate of the time since the species stopped forming fertile hybrids, thereby complementing the average portrait of divergence between species provided by genomic data.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2517234?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent Castric
Jesper Bechsgaard
Mikkel H Schierup
Xavier Vekemans
spellingShingle Vincent Castric
Jesper Bechsgaard
Mikkel H Schierup
Xavier Vekemans
Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Vincent Castric
Jesper Bechsgaard
Mikkel H Schierup
Xavier Vekemans
author_sort Vincent Castric
title Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
title_short Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
title_full Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
title_fullStr Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
title_full_unstemmed Repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
title_sort repeated adaptive introgression at a gene under multiallelic balancing selection.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2008-08-01
description Recently diverged species typically have incomplete reproductive barriers, allowing introgression of genetic material from one species into the genomic background of the other. The role of natural selection in preventing or promoting introgression remains contentious. Because of genomic co-adaptation, some chromosomal fragments are expected to be selected against in the new background and resist introgression. In contrast, natural selection should favor introgression for alleles at genes evolving under multi-allelic balancing selection, such as the MHC in vertebrates, disease resistance, or self-incompatibility genes in plants. Here, we test the prediction that negative, frequency-dependent selection on alleles at the multi-allelic gene controlling pistil self-incompatibility specificity in two closely related species, Arabidopsis halleri and A. lyrata, caused introgression at this locus at a higher rate than the genomic background. Polymorphism at this gene is largely shared, and we have identified 18 pairs of S-alleles that are only slightly divergent between the two species. For these pairs of S-alleles, divergence at four-fold degenerate sites (K = 0.0193) is about four times lower than the genomic background (K = 0.0743). We demonstrate that this difference cannot be explained by differences in effective population size between the two types of loci. Rather, our data are most consistent with a five-fold increase of introgression rates for S-alleles as compared to the genomic background, making this study the first documented example of adaptive introgression facilitated by balancing selection. We suggest that this process plays an important role in the maintenance of high allelic diversity and divergence at the S-locus in flowering plant families. Because genes under balancing selection are expected to be among the last to stop introgressing, their comparison in closely related species provides a lower-bound estimate of the time since the species stopped forming fertile hybrids, thereby complementing the average portrait of divergence between species provided by genomic data.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2517234?pdf=render
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