five

Genetic dissection of assortative mating behavior

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NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-11 收录
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http://datadryad.org/dataset/doi%253A10.5061%252Fdryad.4b240j4
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The evolution of new species is made easier when traits under divergent ecological selection are also mating cues. Such ecological mating cues are now considered more common than previously thought, but we still know little about the genetic changes underlying their evolution, or more generally about the genetic basis for assortative mating behaviors. Both tight physical linkage and the existence of large effect preference loci will strengthen genetic associations between behavioral and ecological barriers, promoting the evolution of assortative mating. The warning patterns of Heliconius melpomene and H. cydno are under disruptive selection due to increased predation of non-mimetic hybrids, and are used during mate recognition. We carried out a genome-wide quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of preference behaviors between these species and showed that divergent male preference has a simple genetic basis. We identify three QTLs that together explain a large proportion (~60%) of the differences in preference behavior observed between the parental species. One of these QTLs is just 1.2 (0-4.8) cM from the major color pattern gene optix, and, individually, all three have a large effect on the preference phenotype. Genomic divergence between H. cydno and H. melpomene is high but broadly heterogenous, and admixture is reduced at the preference-optix color pattern locus, but not the other preference QTL. The simple genetic architecture we reveal will facilitate the evolution and maintenance of new species despite on-going gene flow by coupling behavioral and ecological aspects of reproductive isolation.
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2020-02-24
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