Literature DB >> 23952298

On the importance of balancing selection in plants.

Lynda F Delph1, John K Kelly2.   

Abstract

Balancing selection refers to a variety of selective regimes that maintain advantageous genetic diversity within populations. We review the history of the ideas regarding the types of selection that maintain such polymorphism in flowering plants, notably heterozygote advantage, negative frequency-dependent selection, and spatial heterogeneity. One shared feature of these mechanisms is that whether an allele is beneficial or detrimental is conditional on its frequency in the population. We highlight examples of balancing selection on a variety of discrete traits. These include the well-referenced case of self-incompatibility and recent evidence from species with nuclear-cytoplasmic gynodioecy, both of which exhibit trans-specific polymorphism, a hallmark of balancing selection. We also discuss and give examples of how spatial heterogeneity in particular, which is often thought unlikely to allow protected polymorphism, can maintain genetic variation in plants (which are rooted in place) as a result of microhabitat selection. Lastly, we discuss limitations of the protected polymorphism concept for quantitative traits, where selection can inflate the genetic variance without maintaining specific alleles indefinitely. We conclude that while discrete-morph variation provides the most unambiguous cases of protected polymorphism, they represent only a fraction of the balancing selection at work in plants.
© 2013 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2013 New Phytologist Trust.

Entities:  

Keywords:  negative frequency-dependent selection; nuclear-cytoplasmic gynodioecy; overdominance; spatial heterogeneity; trans-specific polymorphism

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23952298      PMCID: PMC3886833          DOI: 10.1111/nph.12441

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  40 in total

1.  Sequence variation, differential expression, and divergent evolution in starch-related genes among accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana.

Authors:  Sandra Schwarte; Fanny Wegner; Katja Havenstein; Detlef Groth; Martin Steup; Ralph Tiedemann
Journal:  Plant Mol Biol       Date:  2015-02-08       Impact factor: 4.076

2.  A genomic perspective on the generation and maintenance of genetic diversity in herbivorous insects.

Authors:  Andrew D Gloss; Simon C Groen; Noah K Whiteman
Journal:  Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst       Date:  2016-08-19       Impact factor: 13.915

3.  Sexually antagonistic polymorphism in simultaneous hermaphrodites.

Authors:  Crispin Y Jordan; Tim Connallon
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2014-11-20       Impact factor: 3.694

4.  Evolutionary Pathways for the Generation of New Self-Incompatibility Haplotypes in a Nonself-Recognition System.

Authors:  Katarína Bod'ová; Tadeas Priklopil; David L Field; Nicholas H Barton; Melinda Pickup
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2018-04-30       Impact factor: 4.562

5.  An ABA-GA bistable switch can account for natural variation in the variability of Arabidopsis seed germination time.

Authors:  Katie Abley; Pau Formosa-Jordan; Hugo Tavares; Emily Yt Chan; Mana Afsharinafar; Ottoline Leyser; James Cw Locke
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2021-06-01       Impact factor: 8.140

6.  Making the most of your host: the Metrosideros-feeding psyllids (Hemiptera, Psylloidea) of the Hawaiian Islands.

Authors:  Diana M Percy
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2017-01-31       Impact factor: 1.546

7.  Arabidopsis natural variation in insect egg-induced cell death reveals a role for LECTIN RECEPTOR KINASE-I.1.

Authors:  Raphaël Groux; Elia Stahl; Caroline Gouhier-Darimont; Envel Kerdaffrec; Pedro Jimenez-Sandoval; Julia Santiago; Philippe Reymond
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2021-02-25       Impact factor: 8.340

8.  Evidence that Environmental Heterogeneity Maintains a Detoxifying Enzyme Polymorphism in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Mahul Chakraborty; James D Fry
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2015-12-31       Impact factor: 10.834

9.  Extreme copy number variation at a tRNA ligase gene affecting phenology and fitness in yellow monkeyflowers.

Authors:  Thomas C Nelson; Patrick J Monnahan; Mariah K McIntosh; Kayli Anderson; Evan MacArthur-Waltz; Findley R Finseth; John K Kelly; Lila Fishman
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2018-12-10       Impact factor: 6.185

10.  DREB2 (dehydration-responsive element-binding protein 2) type transcription factor in sorghum (Sorghum bicolor): genome-wide identification, characterization and expression profiles under cadmium and salt stresses.

Authors:  M Aydın Akbudak; Ertugrul Filiz; Kubra Kontbay
Journal:  3 Biotech       Date:  2018-09-28       Impact factor: 2.406

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.