Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Biophore, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Mol Ecol. 2010 Dec;19(23):5204-15. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04869.x. Epub 2010 Oct 21.
Despite the advantage of avoiding the costs of sexual reproduction, asexual vertebrates are very rare and often considered evolutionarily disadvantaged when compared to sexual species. Asexual species, however, may have advantages when colonizing (new) habitats or competing with sexual counterparts. They are also evolutionary older than expected, leaving the question whether asexual vertebrates are not only rare because of their 'inferior' mode of reproduction but also because of other reasons. A paradigmatic model system is the unisexual Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa, that arose by hybridization of the Atlantic molly, Poecilia mexicana, as the maternal ancestor, and the sailfin molly, Poecilia latipinna, as the paternal ancestor. Our extensive crossing experiments failed to resynthesize asexually reproducing (gynogenetic) hybrids confirming results of previous studies. However, by producing diploid eggs, female F(1) -hybrids showed apparent preadaptation to gynogenesis. In a range-wide analysis of mitochondrial sequences, we examined the origin of P. formosa. Our analyses point to very few or even a single origin(s) of its lineage, which is estimated to be approximately 120,000 years old. A monophyletic origin was supported from nuclear microsatellite data. Furthermore, a considerable degree of genetic variation, apparent by high levels of clonal microsatellite diversity, was found. Our molecular phylogenetic evidence and the failure to resynthesize the gynogenetic P. formosa together with the old age of the species indicate that some unisexual vertebrates might be rare not because they suffer the long-term consequences of clonal reproduction but because they are only very rarely formed as a result of complex genetic preconditions necessary to produce viable and fertile clonal genomes and phenotypes ('rare formation hypothesis').
尽管避免有性生殖成本具有优势,但与有性物种相比,无性脊椎动物非常罕见,通常被认为在进化上处于劣势。然而,无性物种在殖民(新)栖息地或与有性对应物种竞争时可能具有优势。它们也比预期的进化年龄更大,这就提出了一个问题,即无性脊椎动物不仅因为其“劣势”的繁殖方式而罕见,而且还因为其他原因。一个典范的模式系统是单性的亚马逊食蚊鱼,Poecilia formosa,它是由大西洋食蚊鱼,Poecilia mexicana,作为母系祖先,和帆鳍食蚊鱼,Poecilia latipinna,作为父系祖先杂交产生的。我们广泛的杂交实验未能重新合成无性繁殖(雌核生殖)杂种,证实了之前研究的结果。然而,雌性 F(1)杂种通过产生二倍体卵子,表现出对雌核生殖的明显预先适应。在对线粒体序列的全范围分析中,我们研究了 P. formosa 的起源。我们的分析表明,它的谱系只有很少甚至单一的起源,估计其年龄约为 12 万年。核微卫星数据支持单系起源。此外,还发现了相当程度的遗传变异,明显表现为克隆微卫星多样性水平较高。我们的分子系统发育证据以及未能重新合成雌核生殖的 P. formosa 以及该物种的古老年龄表明,一些无性脊椎动物可能罕见并不是因为它们遭受克隆繁殖的长期后果,而是因为它们只是由于产生可行和可育的克隆基因组和表型所需的复杂遗传前提条件而非常罕见地形成(“罕见形成假说”)。