Carter P A, Watt W B
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Crested Butte, Colorado 81224.
Genetics. 1988 Aug;119(4):913-24. doi: 10.1093/genetics/119.4.913.
The polymorphic phosphoglucomutase (PGM) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) loci have been studied in parallel to experimental work on the phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) polymorphism in Colias butterflies. PGI, PGM and G6PD are also autosomal in Colias. PGM and G6PD are loosely linked (and represent the first identified autosomal linkage group in Colias); they assort independently from PGI. Recombination occurs in both sexes. Neither PGM nor G6PD shows large, consistent differences in flight capacity through the day among its genotypes, as PGI does. PGM shows some change of allele frequencies, and match to Hardy-Weinberg expectation, with air temperature in middle and latter parts of the season, but not early in the season. G6PD may show some heterozygote excess over Hardy-Weinberg expectation early in the day, but more testing is needed. No evidence for differential survivorship was seen at PGM or G6PD, in contrast to PGI. At the PGM and G6PD loci, male heterozygotes are advantaged in mating with females, but without the evidence of female choice which occurs for PGI. These effects are not correlated among the three loci. There is no assortative mating at G6PD (nor at PGI). There is minor positive assortative mating of PGM heterozygotes, but it is too weak to account for the PGM-genotype-specific male mating advantage. No trends of multilocus genotype frequencies involving PGI are seen. Certain PGM-G6PD two-locus genotypes are over-represented, and others under-represented, in wild adult samples, particularly among males and uniformly among successfully mating males. Our results emphasize that enzyme loci sharing a substrate need not have common experience of the existence or strength of natural selection, and suggest initial food-resource processing and allocation as a possible context for fitness-related effects of the PGM and G6PD polymorphisms.
在对科利亚斯蝴蝶磷酸葡萄糖异构酶(PGI)多态性进行实验研究的同时,也对多态性磷酸葡萄糖变位酶(PGM)和葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶(G6PD)基因座进行了研究。在科利亚斯蝴蝶中,PGI、PGM和G6PD也都是常染色体基因。PGM和G6PD紧密连锁(并且是在科利亚斯蝴蝶中首次确定的常染色体连锁群);它们与PGI独立分配。两性中都会发生重组。与PGI不同,PGM和G6PD在一天中飞行能力方面,其基因型之间均未表现出大的、一致的差异。PGM的等位基因频率在季节中期和后期会随气温发生一些变化,并符合哈迪-温伯格预期,但在季节早期并非如此。G6PD在一天早些时候可能会出现一些杂合子过剩现象,超过哈迪-温伯格预期,但还需要更多测试。与PGI不同,在PGM或G6PD上未发现差异生存的证据。在PGM和G6PD基因座上,雄性杂合子在与雌性交配时具有优势,但没有PGI所出现的雌性选择证据。这三个基因座之间的这些效应没有相关性。在G6PD(以及PGI)上没有选型交配。PGM杂合子存在轻微的正选型交配,但强度太弱,无法解释PGM基因型特异性的雄性交配优势。未观察到涉及PGI的多位点基因型频率趋势。在野生成年样本中,特别是在雄性中以及成功交配的雄性中,某些PGM - G6PD双基因座基因型出现频率过高,而其他基因型出现频率过低。我们的结果强调,共享一种底物的酶基因座不一定会经历相同的自然选择存在或强度情况,并表明初始食物资源加工和分配可能是PGM和G6PD多态性与适应性相关效应的一个背景。