García-Navas V, Cáliz-Campal C, Ferrer E S, Sanz J J, Ortego J
Grupo de Investigación de la Biodiversidad Genética y Cultural, Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos IREC (CSIC-UCLM-JCCM), Ciudad Real, Spain; Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales, Facultad de Ciencias Ambientales y Bioquímica, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Toledo, Spain; Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Evol Biol. 2014 Dec;27(12):2807-19. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12539. Epub 2014 Nov 23.
In natural populations, mating between relatives can have important fitness consequences due to the negative effects of reduced heterozygosity. Parental level of inbreeding or heterozygosity has been also found to influence the performance of offspring, via direct and indirect parental effects that are independent of the progeny own level of genetic diversity. In this study, we first analysed the effects of parental heterozygosity and relatedness (i.e. an estimate of offspring genetic diversity) on four traits related to offspring viability in great tits (Parus major) using 15 microsatellite markers. Second, we tested whether significant heterozygosity-fitness correlations (HFCs) were due to 'local' (i.e. linkage to genes influencing fitness) and/or 'general' (genome-wide heterozygosity) effects. We found a significant negative relationship between parental genetic relatedness and hatching success, and maternal heterozygosity was positively associated with offspring body size. The characteristics of the studied populations (recent admixture, polygynous matings) together with the fact that we found evidence for identity disequilibrium across our set of neutral markers suggest that HFCs may have resulted from genome-wide inbreeding depression. However, one locus (Ase18) had disproportionately large effects on the observed HFCs: heterozygosity at this locus had significant positive effects on hatching success and offspring size. It suggests that this marker may lie near to a functional locus under selection (i.e. a local effect) or, alternatively, heterozygosity at this locus might be correlated to heterozygosity across the genome due to the extensive ID found in our populations (i.e. a general effect). Collectively, our results lend support to both the general and local effect hypotheses and reinforce the view that HFCs lie on a continuum from inbreeding depression to those strictly due to linkage between marker loci and genes under selection.
在自然种群中,由于杂合性降低的负面影响,近亲交配可能会产生重要的适合度后果。还发现亲本的近亲繁殖或杂合性水平会影响后代的表现,这是通过与后代自身遗传多样性水平无关的直接和间接亲本效应实现的。在本研究中,我们首先使用15个微卫星标记分析了亲本杂合性和亲缘关系(即后代遗传多样性的估计值)对大山雀(Parus major)后代生存能力相关的四个性状的影响。其次,我们测试了显著的杂合性-适合度相关性(HFCs)是否是由于“局部”(即与影响适合度的基因连锁)和/或“一般”(全基因组杂合性)效应。我们发现亲本遗传亲缘关系与孵化成功率之间存在显著的负相关,而母本杂合性与后代体型呈正相关。所研究种群的特征(近期混合、多配交配)以及我们在一组中性标记中发现身份不平衡的证据表明,HFCs可能是由全基因组近亲繁殖衰退导致的。然而,一个位点(Ase18)对观察到的HFCs有不成比例的大影响:该位点的杂合性对孵化成功率和后代体型有显著的正影响。这表明该标记可能位于选择作用下的功能位点附近(即局部效应),或者,由于我们种群中发现的广泛身份不平衡,该位点的杂合性可能与全基因组的杂合性相关(即一般效应)。总体而言,我们的结果支持了一般效应和局部效应假说,并强化了这样一种观点,即HFCs处于从近亲繁殖衰退到严格由于标记位点与选择作用下的基因之间的连锁所导致的连续统一体上。