Code and data from Genetic constraints on microevolutionary divergence of sex-biased gene expression
收藏DataCite Commons2020-08-28 更新2024-08-17 收录
下载链接:
https://rs.figshare.com/articles/Code_and_data_from_Genetic_constraints_on_microevolutionary_divergence_of_sex-biased_gene_expression/6874793
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
The evolution of sex-specific phenotypes is an important dimension of diversification and local adaptation. The sex-dependent regulation of gene expression is considered a key genomic mechanism facilitating sex-dependent adaptation. In many species, genes with male-biased expression evolve faster in DNA sequence and expression level than genes with female-biased or sexually monomorphic expression. While positive selection may be responsible for rapid DNA sequence evolution, why expression of male-biased genes also evolves rapidly remains unclear. Beyond sex differences in selection, some aspects to the genetic architecture of gene expression could contribute to the rapid evolution of male-biased gene expression. First, male-biased genes might simply have greater standing genetic variance than female-biased genes. Second, male-biased genes could be less constrained by pleiotropy, either within or between sexes. Here, we evaluate these alternative explanations on an intraspecific scale using a series of quantitative genetic experiments conducted on natural variation in male and female gene expression in the fly <i>Drosophila serrata</i>. Male-biased genes had significantly higher genetic variance than female-biased genes and were generally more narrowly expressed across tissues, suggesting lower within individual pleiotropy. However, consistent with stronger constraints due to between-sex pleiotropy, their between-sex genetic correlations, <i>r</i><sub>MF,</sub> were higher than female-biased genes and more strongly negatively associated with sex bias. Using an extensive clinal dataset, we tested whether sex differences in gene expression divergence among populations have been shaped by pleiotropy<i>.</i> Here, too male-biased gene divergence was more strongly associated with between-sex pleiotropy than female-biased gene divergence. Systematic differences in genetic variance and pleiotropy may be important factors influencing sex-specific adaptation arising through changes in gene expression. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Linking local adaptation with the evolution of sex differences’.
提供机构:
The Royal Society
创建时间:
2018-07-28



