| Literature DB >> 24755983 |
M M Patten1, L Ross2, J P Curley3, D C Queller4, R Bonduriansky5, J B Wolf6.
Abstract
The epigenetic phenomenon of genomic imprinting has motivated the development of numerous theories for its evolutionary origins and genomic distribution. In this review, we examine the three theories that have best withstood theoretical and empirical scrutiny. These are: Haig and colleagues' kinship theory; Day and Bonduriansky's sexual antagonism theory; and Wolf and Hager's maternal-offspring coadaptation theory. These theories have fundamentally different perspectives on the adaptive significance of imprinting. The kinship theory views imprinting as a mechanism to change gene dosage, with imprinting evolving because of the differential effect that gene dosage has on the fitness of matrilineal and patrilineal relatives. The sexual antagonism and maternal-offspring coadaptation theories view genomic imprinting as a mechanism to modify the resemblance of an individual to its two parents, with imprinting evolving to increase the probability of expressing the fitter of the two alleles at a locus. In an effort to stimulate further empirical work on the topic, we carefully detail the logic and assumptions of all three theories, clarify the specific predictions of each and suggest tests to discriminate between these alternative theories for why particular genes are imprinted.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24755983 PMCID: PMC4105453 DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2014.29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heredity (Edinb) ISSN: 0018-067X Impact factor: 3.821
Figure 1The kinship theory of genomic imprinting has two prerequisites: first, epigenetic marks that differentiate matrigenes from patrigenes; second, a difference in the relatedness of matrigenes and patrigenes to the social group. (a) The social group in the example depicted is a single litter of offspring, and multiple mating produces a relatedness asymmetry between half-siblings. The relatedness for matrigenes is ½ and the relatedness for patrigenes is 0. (Other sources of relatedness asymmetry are possible—e.g., sex-biased dispersal or high fitness variance in one sex—and social interactions are not limited to the juvenile period only). (b) The kinship theory envisions kin selection acting independently on genes of maternal and paternal origin and solves for the evolutionarily stable gene expression strategy for matrigenes and patrigenes. (c) For genes where the matrigenic allele's optimum expression level is higher than that of the patrigene's (e.g., a fetal growth inhibitor), the kinship theory predicts silencing of the patrigenic allele; for genes with the opposite effect (e.g., a fetal growth enhancer), the prediction is for patrigenic expression.
Figure 2(a, b) The sexual antagonism theory of genomic imprinting starts with sexually antagonistic selection, which produces different allele frequencies, shown as pie charts, for genes of maternal and paternal origin. (c, d) Natural selection favors individuals that are able to express the fitter of the two alleles at a locus, which for males will be the patrigenic allele and for females will be the matrigenic allele. (In addition, the sexual antagonism theory may predict matrigenic or patrigenic expression in both sexes, such that the expressed allele derives from the parental sex that experiences stronger selection pressure. This scenario is not depicted).
Figure 3(a) The maternal–offspring coadaptation theory of genomic imprinting relies on the correlation of genes in the mother and genes of maternal origin in the offspring (shown in light blue). (b) Fitness of offspring is determined by the interaction (shown in dark purple) between the phenotypes of mothers and offspring. (c) Imprinted silencing of the patrigenic allele can be favored for either of two reasons, depending on the genetic architecture of the interacting phenotypes. First, when a single gene governs the interaction and phenotypic matching between mothers and their offspring produces high fitness, then silencing of the patrigenic allele is beneficial to offspring because it raises the probability of producing a match. Second, if different loci are involved in the phenotypic interaction, past correlational selection will have produced a covariance between them, generating haplotypes with combinations of alleles that interact well together. (N.B. This multi-locus interaction is not depicted in the figure.) The offspring is more likely to inherit from its mother an allele that interacts well with the alleles in the mother's genotype. This also favors the imprinted silencing of the patrigenic allele because it raises the probability that the offspring expresses an allele that makes for a good interaction with the maternal phenotype.
Predictions on imprinting of the kinship, coadaptation and sexual antagonism theories
| Mammals, plants, angiosperms, other placental viviparous animals (e.g., some reptiles and fish) | Resource acquisition from mother (placenta, endosperm) | +Patrigene −matrigene | ±Matrigene | |
| Birds, fish, monotremes, gymnosperms | Embryo, resource acquisition in egg | None | ±Matrigene | None |
| Birds, fish | Resource acquisition from parent, post hatching | +Patrigene −matrigene | ±Matrigene | |
| Sex-role-reversed birds or fish | Resource acquisition from father | −Patrigene +matrigene | ±Patrigene | |
| Social insect workers | Queen–worker interactions; nervous tissue, sensory, communication | Variable | Variable | None |
| Moss | Sporophyte resource acquisition from gametophyte | +Patrigene −matrigene | ±Matrigene | None |
| Insects | Sibling competition—mixed paternity broods | +Patrigene −matrigene | None in most species | |
| Many birds | Post-dispersal competition, females disperse | −Patrigene +matrigene | None | None |
| Many mammals | Post-dispersal competition, males disperse | +Patrigene −matrigene | None | +Patrigene −matrigene |
| Any sexually reproducing species | Male-function traits (e.g., secondary sexual traits, including high growth rate | None | None | +Patrigene −matrigene |
| Any sexually reproducing species | Female-function traits (e.g., metabolic pathways and behaviors involved in offspring production, crypsis adaptations) | None | None | −Patrigene +matrigene |
| Hermaphrodite plants, fish | Male traits | None | None | +Patrigene −matrigene |
| Hermaphrodite plants, fish | Female traits | None | None | −Patrigene +matrigene |
| Species with female multiple mating | Cooperative breeding and resource sharing between maternal siblings | −Patrigene +matrigene | None | None |
| Species with female defense or harem polygyny | Cooperative breeding and resource sharing between paternal siblings | +Patrigene −matrigene | None | None |
| Species with male-biased juvenile dispersal | Cooperative breeding and resource sharing between neighbors | −Patrigene +matrigene | None | None |
| Species with male-biased reproductive skew | Cooperative breeding and resource sharing between neighbors | +Patrigene −matrigene | None | None |
The + and − indicate whether a gene is expected to increase or decrease the trait listed in the context/tissue column. ‘None' indicates that no imprinting is generally expected in the absence of pleiotropy (side effects of imprinting for another context). (Brandvain present a table with similar predictions).
Note that if sexual selection favors large body size in males (as is the case in many mammals, and some other taxa), then male embryos and neonates may be selected to extract maternal resources at a greater rate than their sisters. In this case, the sexual antagonism model has somewhat overlapping predictions with the kinship theory. For example, if sexually dimorphic imprinting is not possible, then the sexual antagonism theory would predict paternal expression and maternal silencing of genes that regulate growth rate.
Many different predictions for the kinship theory (Queller, 2003). For the maternal–offspring coadaptation theory, the prediction is ‘± matrigene', but an analogous parallel worker–worker coadaptation theory would be ‘±patrigene' for singly mated haplodiploid species where workers are more related through patrigenes and ‘±matrigene' for multiply mated.