Castric Vincent, Vekemans Xavier
Laboratoire de génétique et évolution des populations végétales, UMR CNRS 8016, Cité Scientifique, Bâtiment SN2, 59655 Villeneuve d'Ascq Cedex, France.
Mol Ecol. 2004 Oct;13(10):2873-89. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2004.02267.x.
Self-incompatibility systems in plants are genetic systems that prevent self-fertilization in hermaphrodites through recognition and rejection of pollen expressing the same allelic specificity as that expressed in the pistils. The evolutionary properties of these self-recognition systems have been revealed through a fascinating interplay between empirical advances and theoretical developments. In 1939, Wright suggested that the main evolutionary force driving the genetic and molecular properties of these systems was strong negative frequency-dependent selection acting on pollination success. The empirical observation of high allelic diversity at the self-incompatibility locus in several species, followed by the discovery of very high molecular divergence among alleles in all plant families where the locus has been identified, supported Wright's initial theoretical predictions as well as many of its later developments. In the last decade, however, advances in the molecular characterization of the incompatibility reaction and in the analysis of allelic frequencies and allelic divergence from natural populations have stimulated new theoretical investigations that challenged some important assumptions of Wright's model of gametophytic self-incompatibility. We here review some of these recent empirical and theoretical advances that investigated: (i) the hypothesis that S-alleles are selectively equivalent, and the evolutionary consequences of genetic interactions between alleles; (ii) the occurrence of frequency-dependent selection in female fertility; (iii) the evolutionary genetics of self-incompatibility systems in subdivided populations; (iv) the evolutionary implications of the self-incompatibility locus's genetic architecture; and (v) of its interactions with the genomic environment.
植物中的自交不亲和系统是一种遗传系统,它通过识别和排斥与雌蕊中表达相同等位基因特异性的花粉,来防止雌雄同体植物的自花受精。这些自我识别系统的进化特性已通过实证进展与理论发展之间引人入胜的相互作用得以揭示。1939年,赖特提出,驱动这些系统的遗传和分子特性的主要进化力量是作用于授粉成功率的强烈负频率依赖选择。在几个物种的自交不亲和位点观察到高等位基因多样性的实证结果,以及随后在所有已确定该位点的植物科中发现等位基因之间非常高的分子差异,都支持了赖特最初的理论预测及其后来的许多发展。然而,在过去十年中,不亲和反应的分子特征研究以及对自然种群中等位基因频率和等位基因差异的分析取得了进展,这激发了新的理论研究,对赖特配子体自交不亲和模型的一些重要假设提出了挑战。我们在此回顾一些最近的实证和理论进展,这些进展研究了:(i)S等位基因在选择上等效的假设,以及等位基因之间遗传相互作用的进化后果;(ii)雌性育性中频率依赖选择的发生;(iii)细分种群中自交不亲和系统的进化遗传学;(iv)自交不亲和位点遗传结构的进化含义;以及(v)其与基因组环境的相互作用。