Literature DB >> 25902513

Hybrid apomicts trapped in the ecological niches of their sexual ancestors.

Martin Mau1, John T Lovell2, José M Corral3, Christiane Kiefer4, Marcus A Koch5, Olawale M Aliyu6, Timothy F Sharbel7.   

Abstract

Asexual reproduction is expected to reduce the adaptive potential to novel or changing environmental conditions, restricting or altering the ecological niche of asexual lineages. Asexual lineages of plants and animals are typically polyploid, an attribute that may influence their genetic variation, plasticity, adaptive potential, and niche breadth. The genus Boechera (Brassicaceae) represents an ideal model to test the relative ecological and biogeographic impacts of reproductive mode and ploidy because it is composed of diploid sexual and both diploid and polyploid asexual (i.e., apomictic) lineages. Here, we demonstrate a strong association between a transcriptionally conserved allele and apomictic seed formation. We then use this allele as a proxy apomixis marker in 1,649 accessions to demonstrate that apomixis is likely to be a common feature across the Boechera phylogeny. Phylogeographic analyses of these data demonstrate (i) species-specific niche differentiation in sexuals, (ii) extensive niche conservation between differing reproductive modes of the same species, (iii) ploidy-specific niche differentiation within and among species, and (iv) occasional niche drift between apomicts and their sexual ancestors. We conclude that ploidy is a substantially stronger and more common driver of niche divergence within and across Boechera species although variation in both traits may not necessarily lead to niche evolution on the species scale.

Entities:  

Keywords:  APOLLO; Boechera; UPGRADE2; geographic parthenogenesis; niche conservation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25902513      PMCID: PMC4426457          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1423447112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  31 in total

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5.  Copy number variation in transcriptionally active regions of sexual and apomictic Boechera demonstrates independently derived apomictic lineages.

Authors:  Olawale M Aliyu; Michael Seifert; José M Corral; Joerg Fuchs; Timothy F Sharbel
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6.  Sexual reproduction, hybridization, apomixis, and polyploidization in the genus Boechera (Brassicaceae).

Authors:  M Eric Schranz; Christoph Dobes; Marcus A Koch; Thomas Mitchell-Olds
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Authors:  T F Sharbel; T Mitchell-Olds
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