| Literature DB >> 23251826 |
Jeremy L Marshall1, Nicholas Dirienzo.
Abstract
Postmating, prezygotic phenotypes are a common mechanism of reproductive isolation. Here, we describe the dynamics of a noncompetitive gametic isolation phenotype (namely, the ability of a male to induce a female to lay eggs) in a group of recently diverged crickets that are primarily isolated from each other by this phenotype. We not only show that heterospecific males are less able to induce females to lay eggs but that there are male by female incompatibilities in this phenotype that occur within populations. We also identify a protein in the female reproductive tract that correlates with the number of eggs that she was induced to lay. Functional genetic tests using RNAi confirm that the function of this protein is linked to egg-laying induction. Moreover, the dysfunction of this protein appears to underlie both within-population incompatibilities and between-species divergence-thus suggesting a common genetic pathway underlies both. However, this is only correlative evidence and further research is needed to assess whether or not the same mutations in the same genes underlie variation at both levels.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23251826 PMCID: PMC3517841 DOI: 10.1155/2012/593438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Evol Biol ISSN: 2090-052X
Con- and heterospecific mating crosses.
| Male population | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comparison | Female species | Female population | Conspecific mating | Heterospecific mating | Statistics | ||||||
| Male |
| Number of eggs laid (SD) | Male |
| Number of eggs laid (SD) | Percentage of reduction |
|
| |||
| 1 |
| AR30 | TX198 | 14 | 116.1 (94.0) | TXIV6 | 19 | 1.4 (3.6) | 98.8 | 5.19 | <0.0001 |
| 2 |
| TX30/146 | SC95/172 | 20 | 143.6 (61.6) | TXIII2 | 22 | 35.7 (53.1) | 75.1 | 6.11 | <0.0001 |
| 3 |
| TX198 | TX30/146 | 9 | 70.6 (41.1) | TXIII2 | 28 | 13.5 (19.2) | 80.9 | 5.74 | <0.0001 |
| 4 |
| TXIII2 | TXIV6 | 22 | 142.4 (63.1) | TX198 | 48 | 58.5 (41.0) | 58.9 | 6.66 | <0.0001 |
| 5 |
| TXIII3 | TXIII2 | 25 | 89.5 (68.2) | TX30/146 | 17 | 43.4 (43.2) | 51.5 | 2.47 | 0.0091 |
| 6 |
| TXIV6 | TXIII3 | 14 | 81.4 (74.8) | AR30 | 16 | 39.4 (38.0) | 51.6 | 1.97 | 0.0293 |
Figure 1The relationship between spermatophore attachment time and egg laying for two populations of A. socius ((a) Georgia, USA; (b) Missouri, USA) and one population of A. sp. nov. Tex ((c) Texas). For each panel two patterns of egg laying are shown—the “normal induction” and “reduced induction” lines. Panel (d) shows the amount of ejaculate (measured by DNA concentration) that is passed to females during copulation. There are also two baseline measurements including the amount of DNA in a virgin female reproductive tract and in a male spermatophore.
Figure 2Patterns of variation and an RNAi experiment on protein F. (a) The abundance of protein F in the female reproductive tract following either a conpopulation (top) or heterospecific (bottom) copulation. (b) The measured relative abundance of protein F relative to patterns of egg laying for conpopulation and heterospecific copulations. (c) A gel showing that RNAi can knock down the abundance of AsocCSP1 (a.k.a. protein F). (d) An RNAi experiment showing patterns of egg laying in conspecific and heterospecific matings.
The identification of protein F with MS/MS and BLAST.
| MS/MS Analyses | BLASTp info | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peptides matched | Delta mass (Da) | MS/MS Ion score ( | Hit number | Description | Organism | Accession number |
|
| YDPQNLYAQAHPELFQ | −0.23 | 52* | 1 | Insect pheromone-binding family |
| XP_317405 | 1 |
| QPQWEQIQK | −1.23 | 28 |
| ||||
| 2 | Chemosensory protein precursor |
| AAO16790 | 9 | |||
|
| |||||||