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1.
Annu Rev Microbiol ; 74: 477-495, 2020 09 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32689915

RESUMO

The genus Saccharomyces is an evolutionary paradox. On the one hand, it is composed of at least eight clearly phylogenetically delineated species; these species are reproductively isolated from each other, and hybrids usually cannot complete their sexual life cycles. On the other hand, Saccharomyces species have a long evolutionary history of hybridization, which has phenotypic consequences for adaptation and domestication. A variety of cellular, ecological, and evolutionary mechanisms are responsible for this partial reproductive isolation among Saccharomyces species. These mechanisms have caused the evolution of diverse Saccharomyces species and hybrids, which occupy a variety of wild and domesticated habitats. In this article, we introduce readers to the mechanisms isolating Saccharomyces species, the circumstances in which reproductive isolation mechanisms are effective and ineffective, and the evolutionary consequences of partial reproductive isolation. We discuss both the evolutionary history of the genus Saccharomyces and the human history of taxonomists and biologists struggling with species concepts in this fascinating genus.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Saccharomyces/classificação , Saccharomyces/genética , Adaptação Fisiológica , Ecossistema , Humanos , Hibridização Genética , Filogenia , Saccharomyces/fisiologia
2.
Yeast ; 39(1-2): 4-24, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35146791

RESUMO

Yeasts are ubiquitous in temperate forests. While this broad habitat is well-defined, the yeasts inhabiting it and their life cycles, niches, and contributions to ecosystem functioning are less understood. Yeasts are present on nearly all sampled substrates in temperate forests worldwide. They associate with soils, macroorganisms, and other habitats and no doubt contribute to broader ecosystem-wide processes. Researchers have gathered information leading to hypotheses about yeasts' niches and their life cycles based on physiological observations in the laboratory as well as genomic analyses, but the challenge remains to test these hypotheses in the forests themselves. Here, we summarize the habitat and global patterns of yeast diversity, give some information on a handful of well-studied temperate forest yeast genera, discuss the various strategies to isolate forest yeasts, and explain temperate forest yeasts' contributions to biotechnology. We close with a summary of the many future directions and outstanding questions facing researchers in temperate forest yeast ecology. Yeasts present an exciting opportunity to better understand the hidden world of microbial ecology in this threatened and global habitat.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Árvores , Biodiversidade , Florestas , Leveduras/genética
3.
Mol Biol Evol ; 37(1): 167-182, 2020 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31518427

RESUMO

Hybridization between species can either promote or impede adaptation. But we know very little about the genetic basis of hybrid fitness, especially in nondomesticated organisms, and when populations are facing environmental stress. We made genetically variable F2 hybrid populations from two divergent Saccharomyces yeast species. We exposed populations to ten toxins and sequenced the most resilient hybrids on low coverage using ddRADseq to investigate four aspects of their genomes: 1) hybridity, 2) interspecific heterozygosity, 3) epistasis (positive or negative associations between nonhomologous chromosomes), and 4) ploidy. We used linear mixed-effect models and simulations to measure to which extent hybrid genome composition was contingent on the environment. Genomes grown in different environments varied in every aspect of hybridness measured, revealing strong genotype-environment interactions. We also found selection against heterozygosity or directional selection for one of the parental alleles, with larger fitness of genomes carrying more homozygous allelic combinations in an otherwise hybrid genomic background. In addition, individual chromosomes and chromosomal interactions showed significant species biases and pervasive aneuploidies. Against our expectations, we observed multiple beneficial, opposite-species chromosome associations, confirmed by epistasis- and selection-free computer simulations, which is surprising given the large divergence of parental genomes (∼15%). Together, these results suggest that successful, stress-resilient hybrid genomes can be assembled from the best features of both parents without paying high costs of negative epistasis. This illustrates the importance of measuring genetic trait architecture in an environmental context when determining the evolutionary potential of genetically diverse hybrid populations.


Assuntos
Aptidão Genética , Hibridização Genética , Saccharomyces/genética , Estresse Fisiológico , Cromossomos Fúngicos , Interação Gene-Ambiente
4.
PLoS Biol ; 16(11): e2005066, 2018 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30419022

RESUMO

Genome-wide sequence divergence between populations can cause hybrid sterility through the action of the anti-recombination system, which rejects crossover repair of double strand breaks between nonidentical sequences. Because crossovers are necessary to ensure proper segregation of homologous chromosomes during meiosis, the reduced recombination rate in hybrids can result in high levels of nondisjunction and therefore low gamete viability. Hybrid sterility in interspecific crosses of Saccharomyces yeasts is known to be associated with such segregation errors, but estimates of the importance of nondisjunction to postzygotic reproductive isolation have been hampered by difficulties in accurately measuring nondisjunction frequencies. Here, we use spore-autonomous fluorescent protein expression to quantify nondisjunction in both interspecific and intraspecific yeast hybrids. We show that segregation is near random in interspecific hybrids. The observed rates of nondisjunction can explain most of the sterility observed in interspecific hybrids through the failure of gametes to inherit at least one copy of each chromosome. Partially impairing the anti-recombination system by preventing expression of the RecQ helicase SGS1 during meiosis cuts nondisjunction frequencies in half. We further show that chromosome loss through nondisjunction can explain nearly all of the sterility observed in hybrids formed between two populations of a single species. The rate of meiotic nondisjunction of each homologous pair was negatively correlated with chromosome size in these intraspecific hybrids. Our results demonstrate that sequence divergence is not only associated with the sterility of hybrids formed between distantly related species but may also be a direct cause of reproductive isolation in incipient species.


Assuntos
Segregação de Cromossomos/fisiologia , Hibridização Genética/genética , Infertilidade/genética , Quimera/genética , Segregação de Cromossomos/genética , Cromossomos , DNA Helicases/metabolismo , Imunofluorescência/métodos , Meiose/genética , Meiose/fisiologia , Não Disjunção Genética/genética , Não Disjunção Genética/fisiologia , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , RecQ Helicases/genética , RecQ Helicases/metabolismo , Recombinação Genética/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Esporos Fúngicos/genética
5.
Curr Genet ; 66(3): 469-474, 2020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31745570

RESUMO

Many species are able to hybridize, but the sterility of these hybrids effectively prevents gene flow between the species, reproductively isolating them and allowing them to evolve independently. Yeast hybrids formed by Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces paradoxus parents are viable and able to grow by mitosis, but they are sexually sterile because most of the gametes they make by meiosis are inviable. The genomes of these two species are so diverged that they cannot recombine properly during meiosis, so they fail to segregate efficiently. Thus most hybrid gametes are inviable because they lack essential chromosomes. Recent work shows that chromosome mis-segregation explains nearly all observed hybrid sterility-genetic incompatibilities have only a small sterilising effect, and there are no significant sterilising incompatibilities in chromosome arrangement or number between the species. It is interesting that chromosomes from these species have diverged so much in sequence without changing in configuration, even though large chromosomal changes occur quite frequently, and sometimes beneficially, in evolving yeast populations.


Assuntos
Segregação de Cromossomos , Cromossomos Fúngicos/genética , Rearranjo Gênico , Meiose , Recombinação Genética , Saccharomyces/genética , Hibridização Genética , Saccharomyces/classificação , Especificidade da Espécie
6.
Mol Biol Evol ; 34(12): 3176-3185, 2017 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28961820

RESUMO

Signaling peptides enable communication between cells, both within and between individuals, and are therefore key to the control of complex physiological and behavioral responses. Since their small sizes prevent direct transmission to secretory pathways, these peptides are often produced as part of a larger polyprotein comprising precursors for multiple related or identical peptides; the physiological and behavioral consequences of this unusual gene structure are not understood. Here, we show that the number of mature-pheromone-encoding repeats in the yeast α-mating-factor gene MFα1 varies considerably between closely related isolates of both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its sister species Saccharomyces paradoxus. Variation in repeat number has important phenotypic consequences: Increasing repeat number caused higher pheromone production and greater competitive mating success. However, the magnitude of the improvement decreased with increasing repeat number such that repeat amplification beyond that observed in natural isolates failed to generate more pheromone, and could actually reduce sexual fitness. We investigate multiple explanations for this pattern of diminishing returns and find that our results are most consistent with a translational trade-off: Increasing the number of encoded repeats results in more mature pheromone per translation event, but also generates longer transcripts thereby reducing the rate of translation-a phenomenon known as length-dependent translation. Length-dependent translation may be a powerful constraint on the evolution of genes encoding repetitive or modular proteins, with important physiological and behavioral consequences across eukaryotes.


Assuntos
Precursores de Proteínas/genética , Precursores de Proteínas/fisiologia , Sinais Direcionadores de Proteínas/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/fisiologia , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Códon/genética , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA/genética , Evolução Molecular , Estudos de Associação Genética , Peptídeos/genética , Feromônios/metabolismo , Sinais Direcionadores de Proteínas/fisiologia , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Transdução de Sinais , Sequências de Repetição em Tandem/genética
7.
Yeast ; 35(1): 85-98, 2018 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28967670

RESUMO

Errors in meiosis can be important postzygotic barriers between different species. In Saccharomyces hybrids, chromosomal missegregation during meiosis I produces gametes with missing or extra chromosomes. Gametes with missing chromosomes are inviable, but we do not understand how extra chromosomes (disomies) influence hybrid gamete inviability. We designed a model predicting rates of missegregation in interspecific hybrid meioses assuming several different mechanisms of disomy tolerance, and compared predictions from the model with observations of sterility in hybrids between Saccharomyces yeast species. Sterility observations were consistent with the hypothesis that chromosomal missegregation causes hybrid sterility, and the model indicated that missegregation probabilities of 13-50% per chromosome can cause observed values of 90-99% hybrid sterility regardless of how cells tolerate disomies. Missing chromosomes in gametes are responsible for most infertility, but disomies may kill as many as 11% of the gametes produced by hybrids between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces paradoxus. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Assuntos
Aneuploidia , Segregação de Cromossomos/genética , Cromossomos Fúngicos/genética , Hibridização Genética , Meiose , Modelos Genéticos , Saccharomyces/genética , Saccharomyces/fisiologia
8.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 13(6): e1005592, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28598992

RESUMO

Models of mRNA translation usually presume that transcripts are linear; upon reaching the end of a transcript each terminating ribosome returns to the cytoplasmic pool before initiating anew on a different transcript. A consequence of linear models is that faster translation of a given mRNA is unlikely to generate more of the encoded protein, particularly at low ribosome availability. Recent evidence indicates that eukaryotic mRNAs are circularized, potentially allowing terminating ribosomes to preferentially reinitiate on the same transcript. Here we model the effect of ribosome reinitiation on translation and show that, at high levels of reinitiation, protein synthesis rates are dominated by the time required to translate a given transcript. Our model provides a simple mechanistic explanation for many previously enigmatic features of eukaryotic translation, including the negative correlation of both ribosome densities and protein abundance on transcript length, the importance of codon usage in determining protein synthesis rates, and the negative correlation between transcript length and both codon adaptation and 5' mRNA folding energies. In contrast to linear models where translation is largely limited by initiation rates, our model reveals that all three stages of translation-initiation, elongation, and termination/reinitiation-determine protein synthesis rates even at low ribosome availability.


Assuntos
Iniciação Traducional da Cadeia Peptídica/genética , Modificação Traducional de Proteínas/genética , RNA Mensageiro/química , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Ribossomos/química , Ribossomos/genética , Simulação por Computador , Modelos Químicos , Modelos Genéticos , Elongação Traducional da Cadeia Peptídica/genética , RNA Mensageiro/ultraestrutura , Ribossomos/ultraestrutura , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Fatores de Transcrição/química , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/ultraestrutura
9.
FEMS Yeast Res ; 16(3)2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26880797

RESUMO

Spores from wild yeast isolates often show great variation in the size of colonies they produce, for largely unknown reasons. Here we measure the colonies produced from single spores from six different wild Saccharomyces paradoxus strains. We found remarkable variation in spore colony sizes, even among spores that were genetically identical. Different strains had different amounts of variation in spore colony sizes, and variation was not affected by the number of preceding meioses, or by spore maturation time. We used time-lapse photography to show that wild strains also have high variation in spore germination timing, providing a likely mechanism for the variation in spore colony sizes. When some spores from a laboratory strain make small colonies, or no colonies, it usually indicates a genetic or meiotic fault. Here, we demonstrate that in wild strains spore colony size variation is normal. We discuss and assess potential adaptive and non-adaptive explanations for this variation.


Assuntos
Saccharomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Esporos Fúngicos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Microscopia , Saccharomyces/isolamento & purificação , Imagem com Lapso de Tempo
10.
Am Nat ; 185(2): 291-301, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25616146

RESUMO

Gene combinations conferring local fitness may be destroyed by mating with individuals that are adapted to a different environment. This form of outbreeding depression provides an evolutionary incentive for self-fertilization. We show that the yeast Saccharomyces paradoxus tends to self-fertilize when it is well adapted to its local environment but tends to outcross when it is poorly adapted. This behavior could preserve combinations of genes when they are beneficial and break them up when they are not, thereby helping adaptation. Haploid spores must germinate before mating, and we found that fitter spores had higher rates of germination across a 24-hour period, increasing the probability that they mate with germinated spores from the same meiotic tetrad. The ability of yeast spores to detect local conditions before germinating and mating suggests the novel possibility that these gametes directly sense their own adaptation and plastically adjust their breeding strategy accordingly.


Assuntos
Adaptação Biológica , Saccharomyces/fisiologia , Autofertilização , Esporos Fúngicos/fisiologia , Meio Ambiente , Aptidão Genética
11.
Mol Ecol ; 24(7): 1596-610, 2015 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25706044

RESUMO

The natural history of the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is poorly understood and confounded by domestication. In nature, S. cerevisiae and its undomesticated relative S. paradoxus are usually found on the bark of oak trees, a habitat very different from wine or other human fermentations. It is unclear whether the oak trees are really the primary habitat for wild yeast, or whether this apparent association is due to biased sampling. We use culturing and high-throughput environmental sequencing to show that S. paradoxus is a very rare member of the oak bark microbial community. We find that S. paradoxus can grow well on sterile medium made from oak bark, but that its growth is strongly suppressed when the other members of the community are present. We purified a set of twelve common fungal and bacterial species from the oak bark community and tested how each affected the growth of S. paradoxus in direct competition on oak bark medium at summer and winter temperatures, identifying both positive and negative interactions. One Pseudomonas species produces a diffusible toxin that suppresses S. paradoxus as effectively as either the whole set of twelve species together or the complete community present in nonsterilized oak medium. Conversely, one of the twelve species, Mucilaginibacter sp., had the opposite effect and promoted S. paradoxus growth at low temperatures. We conclude that, in its natural oak tree habitat, S. paradoxus is a rare species whose success depends on the much more abundant microbial species surrounding it.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Casca de Planta/microbiologia , Quercus/microbiologia , Saccharomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Antibiose , Bacteroidetes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Biota , DNA Fúngico/genética , DNA Fúngico/isolamento & purificação , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Metagenoma , Pseudomonas/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Saccharomyces/isolamento & purificação , Análise de Sequência de DNA
12.
FEMS Yeast Res ; 15(3)2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25725024

RESUMO

Different species are usually thought to have specific adaptations, which allow them to occupy different ecological niches. But recent neutral ecology theory suggests that species diversity can simply be the result of random sampling, due to finite population sizes and limited dispersal. Neutral models predict that species are not necessarily adapted to specific niches, but are functionally equivalent across a range of habitats. Here, we evaluate the ecology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, one of the most important microbial species in human history. The artificial collection, concentration and fermentation of large volumes of fruit for alcohol production produce an environment in which S. cerevisiae thrives, and therefore it is assumed that fruit is the ecological niche that S. cerevisiae inhabits and has adapted to. We find very little direct evidence that S. cerevisiae is adapted to fruit, or indeed to any other specific niche. We propose instead a neutral nomad model for S. cerevisiae, which we believe should be used as the starting hypothesis in attempting to unravel the ecology of this important microbe.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/isolamento & purificação , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/fisiologia , Adaptação Biológica , Ecologia , Modelos Teóricos
13.
Yeast ; 31(12): 449-62, 2014 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25242436

RESUMO

Yeast researchers need model systems for ecology and evolution, but the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is not ideal because its evolution has been affected by domestication. Instead, ecologists and evolutionary biologists are focusing on close relatives of S. cerevisiae, the seven species in the genus Saccharomyces. The best-studied Saccharomyces yeast, after S. cerevisiae, is S. paradoxus, an oak tree resident throughout the northern hemisphere. In addition, several more members of the genus Saccharomyces have recently been discovered. Some Saccharomyces species are only found in nature, while others include both wild and domesticated strains. Comparisons between domesticated and wild yeasts have pinpointed hybridization, introgression and high phenotypic diversity as signatures of domestication. But studies of wild Saccharomyces natural history, biogeography and ecology are only beginning. Much remains to be understood about wild yeasts' ecological interactions and life cycles in nature. We encourage researchers to continue to investigate Saccharomyces yeasts in nature, both to place S. cerevisiae biology into its ecological context and to develop the genus Saccharomyces as a model clade for ecology and evolution.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Ecossistema , Variação Genética , Saccharomyces/classificação , Saccharomyces/genética
14.
PLoS Biol ; 8(9)2010 Sep 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20856906

RESUMO

Is a group best off if everyone co-operates? Theory often considers this to be so (e.g. the "conspiracy of doves"), this understanding underpinning social and economic policy. We observe, however, that after competition between "cheat" and "co-operator" strains of yeast, population fitness is maximized under co-existence. To address whether this might just be a peculiarity of our experimental system or a result with broader applicability, we assemble, benchmark, dissect, and test a systems model. This reveals the conditions necessary to recover the unexpected result. These are 3-fold: (a) that resources are used inefficiently when they are abundant, (b) that the amount of co-operation needed cannot be accurately assessed, and (c) the population is structured, such that co-operators receive more of the resource than the cheats. Relaxing any of the assumptions can lead to population fitness being maximized when cheats are absent, which we experimentally demonstrate. These three conditions will often be relevant, and hence in order to understand the trajectory of social interactions, understanding the dynamics of the efficiency of resource utilization and accuracy of information will be necessary.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Enganação , Processos Grupais , Humanos , Modelos Teóricos
15.
FEMS Yeast Res ; 12(6): 668-74, 2012 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22672638

RESUMO

Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast cells court each other by producing an attractive sex pheromone specific to their mating type. Cells detect the sex pheromone from potential mates using a well-defined intracellular signalling cascade that has become a model for studying signal transduction. In contrast, the factors contributing to the production of pheromone itself are poorly characterized, despite the widespread use of the S. cerevisiae α-pheromone secretion pathway in industrial fungal protein expression systems. Progress in understanding pheromone secretion has been hindered by a lack of a precise and quantitative pheromone production assay. Here, we present an ELISA-based method for the quantification of α-pheromone secretion. In the absence of pheromone from the opposite mating type, we found that each cell secretes over 550 mature α-pheromone peptides per second; 90% of this total was produced from MF α1. The addition of a-pheromone more than doubled total α-pheromone secretion. This technique offers several improvements on current methods for measuring α-pheromone production and will allow detailed investigation of the factors regulating pheromone production in yeast.


Assuntos
Micologia/métodos , Peptídeos/análise , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Ensaio de Imunoadsorção Enzimática/métodos , Fator de Acasalamento
16.
Elife ; 102021 02 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33590825

RESUMO

Experiments on yeast cells that are hosts to a killer virus confirm that natural selection can sometimes reduce fitness.


Assuntos
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Vírus , Seleção Genética
17.
Curr Biol ; 31(4): R180-R181, 2021 02 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33621502

RESUMO

Hybrid sterility maintains reproductive isolation between species by preventing them from exchanging genetic material1. Anti-recombination can contribute to hybrid sterility when different species' chromosome sequences are too diverged to cross over efficiently during hybrid meiosis, resulting in chromosome mis-segregation and aneuploidy. The genome sequences of the yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces paradoxus have diverged by about 12% and their hybrids are sexually sterile: nearly all of their gametes are aneuploid and inviable. Previous methods to increase hybrid yeast fertility have targeted the anti-recombination machinery by enhancing meiotic crossing over. However, these methods also have counteracting detrimental effects on gamete viability due to increased mutagenesis2 and ectopic recombination3. Therefore, the role of anti-recombination has not been fully revealed, and it is often dismissed as a minor player in speciation1. By repressing two genes, SGS1 and MSH2, specifically during meiosis whilst maintaining their mitotic expression, we were able to increase hybrid fertility 70-fold, to the level of non-hybrid crosses, confirming that anti-recombination is the principal cause of hybrid sterility. Breaking this species barrier allows us to generate, for the first time, viable euploid gametes containing recombinant hybrid genomes from these two highly diverged parent species.


Assuntos
Hibridização Genética , Meiose/genética , Recombinação Genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces/genética , Aneuploidia , Segregação de Cromossomos , Proteína 2 Homóloga a MutS/genética , RecQ Helicases/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
18.
Curr Biol ; 17(7): R251-3, 2007 Apr 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17407756

RESUMO

Yeast is a superb laboratory model organism, but little is known about its natural lifestyle. Recent studies of wild yeast are beginning to reveal details of Saccharomyces population structure and evolution that challenge assumptions about speciation and dispersal in microbes.


Assuntos
Especiação Genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Cromossomos Fúngicos , Europa (Continente) , América do Norte , Quercus/microbiologia , Saccharomyces/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/classificação
19.
PLoS Genet ; 3(2): e21, 2007 Feb 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17305429

RESUMO

Diploid hybrids of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its closest relative, Saccharomyces paradoxus, are viable, but the sexual gametes they produce are not. One of several possible causes of this gamete inviability is incompatibility between genes from different species--such incompatible genes are usually called "speciation genes." In diploid F1 hybrids, which contain a complete haploid genome from each species, the presence of compatible alleles can mask the effects of (recessive) incompatible speciation genes. But in the haploid gametes produced by F1 hybrids, recessive speciation genes may be exposed, killing the gametes and thus preventing F1 hybrids from reproducing sexually. Here I present the results of an experiment to detect incompatibilities that kill hybrid gametes. I transferred nine of the 16 S. paradoxus chromosomes individually into S. cerevisiae gametes and tested the ability of each to replace its S. cerevisiae homeolog. All nine chromosomes were compatible, producing nine viable haploid strains, each with 15 S. cerevisiae chromosomes and one S. paradoxus chromosome. Thus, none of these chromosomes contain speciation genes that were capable of killing the hybrid gametes that received them. This is a surprising result that suggests that such speciation genes do not play a major role in yeast speciation.


Assuntos
Genes Recessivos , Especiação Genética , Células Germinativas/metabolismo , Hibridização Genética/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Cromossomos Fúngicos , Eletroforese em Gel de Campo Pulsado , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Técnicas de Transferência de Genes , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/citologia
20.
Proc Biol Sci ; 276(1656): 543-9, 2009 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18842545

RESUMO

The fundamental principle underlying sexual selection theory is that an allele conferring an advantage in the competition for mates will spread through a population. Remarkably, this has never been demonstrated empirically. We have developed an experimental system using yeast for testing genetic models of sexual selection. Yeast signal to potential partners by producing an attractive pheromone; stronger signallers are preferred as mates. We tested the effect of high and low levels of sexual selection on the evolution of a gene determining the strength of this signal. Under high sexual selection, an allele encoding a stronger signal was able to invade a population of weak signallers, and we observed a corresponding increase in the amount of pheromone produced. By contrast, the strong signalling allele failed to invade under low sexual selection. Our results demonstrate, for the first time, the spread of a sexually selected allele through a population, confirming the central assumption of sexual selection theory. Our yeast system is a powerful tool for investigating the genetics of sexual selection.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Seleção Genética
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