Davey John W, Barker Sarah L, Rastas Pasi M, Pinharanda Ana, Martin Simon H, Durbin Richard, McMillan W Owen, Merrill Richard M, Jiggins Chris D
Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Downing Street Cambridge CB2 3EJ United Kingdom.
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Gamboa Panama.
Evol Lett. 2017 Jun 14;1(3):138-154. doi: 10.1002/evl3.12. eCollection 2017 Aug.
Mechanisms that suppress recombination are known to help maintain species barriers by preventing the breakup of coadapted gene combinations. The sympatric butterfly species and are separated by many strong barriers, but the species still hybridize infrequently in the wild, and around 40% of the genome is influenced by introgression. We tested the hypothesis that genetic barriers between the species are maintained by inversions or other mechanisms that reduce between-species recombination rate. We constructed fine-scale recombination maps for Panamanian populations of both species and their hybrids to directly measure recombination rate within and between species, and generated long sequence reads to detect inversions. We find no evidence for a systematic reduction in recombination rates in F1 hybrids, and also no evidence for inversions longer than 50 kb that might be involved in generating or maintaining species barriers. This suggests that mechanisms leading to global or local reduction in recombination do not play a significant role in the maintenance of species barriers between and .
已知抑制重组的机制通过防止共适应基因组合的分裂来帮助维持物种屏障。同域分布的蝴蝶物种 和 被许多强大的屏障分隔,但这两个物种在野外仍很少杂交,并且约40%的基因组受到基因渗入的影响。我们检验了这样一个假说,即物种之间的遗传屏障是由倒位或其他降低物种间重组率的机制维持的。我们构建了这两个物种及其杂交种巴拿马种群的精细重组图谱,以直接测量物种内和物种间的重组率,并生成了长序列读数以检测倒位。我们没有发现F1杂交种重组率系统性降低的证据,也没有发现可能参与形成或维持物种屏障的长度超过50 kb的倒位的证据。这表明导致重组在全球或局部降低的机制在维持 和 之间的物种屏障中并不起重要作用。