Garlovsky Martin D, Snook Rhonda R
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences University of Sheffield Sheffield UK.
Department of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm Sweden.
Ecol Evol. 2018 Aug 19;8(17):9062-9073. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4441. eCollection 2018 Sep.
Studying reproductive barriers between populations of the same species is critical to understand how speciation may proceed. Growing evidence suggests postmating, prezygotic (PMPZ) reproductive barriers play an important role in the evolution of early taxonomic divergence. However, the contribution of PMPZ isolation to speciation is typically studied between species in which barriers that maintain isolation may not be those that contributed to reduced gene flow between populations. Moreover, in internally fertilizing animals, PMPZ isolation is related to male ejaculate-female reproductive tract incompatibilities but few studies have examined how mating history of the sexes can affect the strength of PMPZ isolation and the extent to which PMPZ isolation is repeatable or restricted to particular interacting genotypes. We addressed these outstanding questions using multiple populations of . We show a recurrent pattern of PMPZ isolation, with flies from one population exhibiting reproductive incompatibility in crosses with all three other populations, while those three populations were fully fertile with each other. Reproductive incompatibility is due to lack of fertilization and is asymmetrical, affecting female fitness more than males. There was no effect of male or female mating history on reproductive incompatibility, indicating that PMPZ isolation persists between populations. We found no evidence of variability in fertilization outcomes attributable to different female × male genotype interactions, and in combination with our other results, suggests that PMPZ isolation is not driven by idiosyncratic genotype × genotype interactions. Our results show PMPZ isolation as a strong, consistent barrier to gene flow early during speciation and suggest several targets of selection known to affect ejaculate-female reproductive tract interactions within species that may cause this PMPZ isolation.
研究同一物种不同种群之间的生殖屏障对于理解物种形成的过程至关重要。越来越多的证据表明,交配后、合子前(PMPZ)生殖屏障在早期分类学分歧的进化中起着重要作用。然而,PMPZ隔离对物种形成的贡献通常是在物种之间进行研究的,在这些物种中,维持隔离的屏障可能并非导致种群间基因流动减少的屏障。此外,在体内受精的动物中,PMPZ隔离与雄性射精-雌性生殖道不相容性有关,但很少有研究探讨两性的交配史如何影响PMPZ隔离的强度,以及PMPZ隔离在多大程度上是可重复的或仅限于特定的相互作用基因型。我们使用多个种群来解决这些悬而未决的问题。我们展示了一种PMPZ隔离的反复出现的模式,来自一个种群的果蝇在与其他三个种群的杂交中表现出生殖不相容性,而这三个种群彼此之间完全可育。生殖不相容是由于受精失败,并且是不对称的,对雌性适合度的影响大于雄性。雄性或雌性的交配史对生殖不相容性没有影响,这表明PMPZ隔离在种群之间持续存在。我们没有发现受精结果因不同的雌性×雄性基因型相互作用而产生变异的证据,结合我们的其他结果,这表明PMPZ隔离不是由特异的基因型×基因型相互作用驱动的。我们的结果表明,PMPZ隔离是物种形成早期基因流动的一个强大、一致的屏障,并提出了几个已知会影响物种内射精-雌性生殖道相互作用的选择靶点,这些靶点可能导致这种PMPZ隔离。