We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Decay of Sexual Trait Genes in an Asexual Parasitoid Wasp.
- Authors
Kraaijeveld, Ken; Anvar, Seyed Yahya; Frank, Jeroen; Schmitz, Arnoud; Bast, Jens; Wilbrandt, Jeanne; Petersen, Malte; Ziesmann, Tanja; Niehuis, Oliver; de Knijff, Peter; den Dunnen, Johan T.; Ellers, Jacintha
- Abstract
Trait loss is a widespread phenomenon with pervasive consequences for a species' evolutionary potential. The genetic changes underlying trait loss have only been clarified in a small number of cases. None of these studies can identify whether the loss of the trait under study was a result of neutral mutation accumulation or negative selection. This distinction is relatively clear-cut in the loss of sexual traits in asexual organisms. Male-specific sexual traits are not expressed and can only decay through neutral mutations, whereas female-specific traits are expressed and subject to negative selection. We present the genome of an asexual parasitoid wasp and compare it to that of a sexual lineage of the same species. We identify a short-list of 16 genes for which the asexual lineage carries deleterious SNP or indel variants, whereas the sexual lineage does not. Using tissue-specific expression data from other insects, we show that fifteen of these are expressed in male-specific reproductive tissues. Only one deleterious variant was found that is expressed in the female-specific spermathecae, a trait that is heavily degraded and thought to be under negative selection in L. clavipes. Although the phenotypic decay of male-specific sexual traits in asexuals is generally slow compared with the decay of female-specific sexual traits, we show that male-specific traits do indeed accumulate deleterious mutations as expected by theory. Our results provide an excellent starting point for detailed study of the genomics of neutral and selected trait decay.
- Subjects
PARASITOIDS; WASPS; GENETIC mutation; GENOMES; SPERMATHECA
- Publication
Genome Biology & Evolution, 2016, Vol 8, Issue 12, p3685
- ISSN
1759-6653
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/gbe/evw273