| Literature DB >> 15736976 |
Thomas Lenormand1, Julien Dutheil.
Abstract
Why the autosomal recombination rate differs between female and male meiosis in most species has been a genetic enigma since the early study of meiosis. Some hypotheses have been put forward to explain this widespread phenomenon and, up to now, only one fact has emerged clearly: In species in which meiosis is achiasmate in one sex, it is the heterogametic one. This pattern, known as the Haldane-Huxley rule, is thought to be a side effect, on autosomes, of the suppression of recombination between the sex chromosomes. However, this rule does not hold for heterochiasmate species (i.e., species in which recombination is present in both sexes but varies quantitatively between sexes) and does not apply to species lacking sex chromosomes, such as hermaphroditic plants. In this paper, we show that in plants, heterochiasmy is due to a male-female difference in gametic selection and is not influenced by the presence of heteromorphic sex chromosomes. This finding provides strong empirical support in favour of a population genetic explanation for the evolution of heterochiasmy and, more broadly, for the evolution of sex and recombination.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15736976 PMCID: PMC1044830 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Data on Which the Haldane-Huxley Rule is Based
Listed are the data available to Haldane [4] when he proposed the Haldane-Huxley rule
a r represents recombination in males
b r represents recombination in females
c Plus and minus symbols indicate the direction of heterochiasmy, and zero indicates achiasmy
Dataset Pooled by Species with Levels of Phylogenetic Grouping Used in the Analysis
Note that references given in Burt et al. [17] were not repeated here
a K, kingdom. Numeric indicators in this column are: 1, Animalia; 2, Plantae
b P, phylum. Numeric indicators in this column are: 1, Arthropoda; 2, Chordata; 3, Embryophyta; 4, Platyhelminthes
c C, class. Numeric indicators in this column are: 1, Actinopterygii; 2, Amphibia; 3, Magnoliopsidae (subclass asterids); 4, Aves; 5, Coniferopsida; 6, Insecta; 7, Liliopsida; 8, Mammalia; 9, Magnoliopsidae (subclass rosids); 10, Trematoda; 11, Turbellaria
d Data refers to linkage map (LM) or chiasma count (CC)
e Male and female indicate the value for the chiasma count or map length for each sex
f Ratio refers to male/female recombination rate
g V refers to the presence or absence of sex chromosome (see Materials and Methods, “Sex chromosome effect”)
h Data were obtained from maps DBNordic2 and NIAIJapan (http://www.genome.iastate.edu/pig.html) [54,55]
ND, no data
Figure 1Phylogenetic Correlogram of Heterochiasmy and Selfing Rate
The y-axis represents Moran's I rescaled to enable comparisons between each taxonomic level for heterochiasmy (ρ, solid line) and selfing rate (V, dashed line). The x-axis represents the taxonomic level: /S is the correlation within species, S/G is the correlation of species within genera, etc. F, family; O, order; C, class; P, phylum; K, kingdom. Filled points indicate significance at p = 0.05.
Plant Species Used to Test the Effect of Male and Female Opportunity for Selection
a Ratio refers to male-to-female recombination rate
LM, linkage map; CC, chiasma count; n, haploid number of chromosomes; V, measure of male opportunity for haploid selection; V, measure of female opportunity for haploid selection
Figure 2Logarithm of Male-Female Ratio in Recombination Rate in Plants
Mean and 95% confidence interval of ρ is shown for different groups of plants, assuming normality and independent data points The number of species in each group is indicated next to the mean.
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