我要吃瓜

Article

Strongly asymmetric hybridization barriers shape the origin of a new polyploid species and its hybrid ancestor

Details

Citation

Vallejo-Marín M, Cooley AM, Lee MYQ, Folmer M, McKain MR & Puzey JR (2016) Strongly asymmetric hybridization barriers shape the origin of a new polyploid species and its hybrid ancestor. American Journal of Botany, 103 (7), pp. 1272-1288. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1500471

Abstract
PREMISE OF THE STUDY:Hybridization between diploids and tetraploids can lead to new allopolyploid species, often via a triploid intermediate. Viable triploids are often produced asymmetrically, with greater success observed for “maternal-excess” crosses where the mother has a higher ploidy than the father. Here we investigated the evolutionary origins ofMimulus peregrinus, an allohexaploid recently derived from the triploidM. ×robertsii, to determine whether reproductive asymmetry has shaped the formation of this new species.  METHODS:We used reciprocal crosses between the diploid (M. guttatus) and tetraploid (M. luteus) progenitors to determine the viability of triploidM. ×robertsiihybrids resulting from paternal- vs. maternal-excess crosses. To investigate whether experimental results predict patterns seen in the field, we performed parentage analyses comparing natural populations ofM. peregrinusto its diploid, tetraploid, and triploid progenitors. Organellar sequences obtained from pre-existing genomic data, supplemented with additional genotyping was used to establish the maternal ancestry of multipleM. peregrinusandM. ×robertsiipopulations.  KEY RESULTS:We found strong evidence for asymmetric origins ofM. peregrinus, but opposite to the common pattern, with paternal-excess crosses significantly more successful than maternal-excess crosses. These results successfully predicted hybrid formation in nature: 111 of 114M. ×robertsiiindividuals, and 27 of 27M. peregrinus, had anM. guttatusmaternal haplotype.  CONCLUSION:This study, which includes the firstMimuluschloroplast genome assembly, demonstrates the utility of parentage analysis through genome skimming. We highlight the benefits of complementing genomic analyses with experimental approaches to understand asymmetry in allopolyploid speciation.

Keywords
allopolyploidy; asexual reproduction; chloroplast genome; genome skimming; hybridization; introduced species; Mimulus peregrinus; mitochondrial genome; sterile hybrid; triploid block

Journal
American Journal of Botany: Volume 103, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/07/2016
Publication date online24/05/2016
Date accepted by journal16/02/2016
URL
PublisherBotanical Society of America
ISSN0002-9122
eISSN1537-2197

Projects (1)

Files (1)