Identidad Institucional CRAI
Logo EdocUR
    • English
    • español
    • português
  •  Carga de trabalho
  •  Perguntas frequentes
  • português 
    • English
    • español
    • português
  • Entrar

Contacto

Twitter

Facebook

Youtube

Ver item 
  •   Repositorio Institucional EdocUR
  • Investigación
  • Artículos
  • Ver item
  •   Repositorio Institucional EdocUR
  • Investigación
  • Artículos
  • Ver item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Recombination rate variation shapes barriers to introgression across butterfly genomes

  • Exportar citas ▼
    • Exportar a Mendeley
    • Exportar a BibTex
Thumbnail

Data

2019

Autor

Martin, Simon H.
Davey, John W.
Salazar, CamiloAutoridad Universidad de Rosario
Jiggins, Chris D
Métricas

Share

Citas

URI

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2006288
https://repository.urosario.edu.co/handle/10336/22819

Abstract

Hybridisation and introgression can dramatically alter the relationships among groups of species, leading to phylogenetic discordance across the genome and between populations. Introgression can also erode species differences over time, but selection against introgression at certain loci acts to maintain postmating species barriers. Theory predicts that species barriers made up of many loci throughout the genome should lead to a broad correlation between introgression and recombination rate, which determines the extent to which selection on deleterious foreign alleles will affect neutral alleles at physically linked loci. Here, we describe the variation in genealogical relationships across the genome among three species of Heliconius butterflies: H. melpomene (mel), H. cydno (cyd), and H. timareta (tim), using whole genomes of 92 individuals, and ask whether this variation can be explained by heterogeneous barriers to introgression. We find that species relationships vary predictably at the chromosomal scale. By quantifying recombination rate and admixture proportions, we then show that rates of introgression are predicted by variation in recombination rate. This implies that species barriers are highly polygenic, with selection acting against introgressed alleles across most of the genome. In addition, long chromosomes, which have lower recombination rates, produce stronger barriers on average than short chromosomes. Finally, we find a consistent difference between two species pairs on either side of the Andes, which suggests differences in the architecture of the species barriers. Our findings illustrate how the combined effects of hybridisation, recombination, and natural selection, acting at multitudes of loci over long periods, can dramatically sculpt the phylogenetic relationships among species. © 2019 Martin et al.

Keyword

Adult ; insect ; insect ; Allele ; population ; genetic ; genetic ; Article ; Butterfly ; Chromosome ; Female ; Genome ; Human ; Human experiment ; Introgression ; Major clinical study ; Male ; Natural selection ; Nonhuman ; Phylogeny ; Animal ; Butterfly ; Gene flow ; Genetic recombination ; Genetic selection ; Genetics ; Insect chromosome ; Insect genome ; Population genetics ; Species difference ; Animals ; Butterflies ; Chromosomes ; Gene flow ; Genetics ; Genome ; Phylogeny ; Recombination ; Selection ; Species specificity ;

Link para a fonte

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85061272706&doi=10.1371%2fjo...

Mostrar registro completo

Collections
  • Artículos [6080]
Política de Acceso Abierto URPortal de Revistas URRepositorio de Datos de Investigación URCiencia Abierta UR
 

 

Navegar

Todo o repositórioComunidades e ColeçõesTítulosAutoresTypeAssuntosDirectorPor data do documentoEsta coleçãoTítulosAutoresTypeAssuntosDirectorPor data do documento

Minha conta

EntrarCadastro

Estatística

Ver as estatísticas de uso
Política de Acceso Abierto URPortal de Revistas URRepositorio de Datos de Investigación URCiencia Abierta UR