The balanced lethal system of crested newts: a ghost of sex chromosomes past?
Data(s) |
2012
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Resumo |
Balanced lethal systems are more than biological curiosities: as theory predicts, they should quickly be eliminated through the joint forces of recombination and selection. That such systems might become fixed in natural populations poses a challenge to evolutionary theory. Here we address the case of a balanced lethal system fixed in crested newts and related species, which makes 50% of offspring die early in development. All adults are heteromorphic for chromosome pair 1. The two homologues (1A and 1B) have different recessive deleterious alleles fixed on a nonrecombining segment, so that heterozygotes are viable, while homozygotes are lethal. Given such a strong segregation load, how could autosomes stop recombining? We propose a role for a sex-chromosome turnover from pair 1 (putative ancestral sex chromosome) to pair 4 (currently active sex chromosome). Accordingly, 1A and 1B represent two variants (Y(A) and Y(B)) of the Y chromosome from an ancestral male-heterogametic system. We formalize a scenario in which turnovers are driven by sex ratio selection stemming from gene-environment interactions on sex determination. Individual-based simulations show that a balanced lethal system can be fixed with significant likelihood, provided the masculinizing allele on chromosome 4 appears after the elimination of the feminizing allele on chromosome 1. Our study illustrates how strikingly maladaptive traits might evolve through natural selection. |
Identificador |
http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_38CA0C260197 isbn:1537-5323 (Electronic) pmid:23149410 doi:10.1086/668076 isiid:000311090100002 |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Fonte |
American Naturalist, vol. 180, no. 6, pp. E174-E183 |
Palavras-Chave | #balanced lethal system; maladaptive trait; sex chromosome turnovers; sex ratio selection |
Tipo |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article article |