| Literature DB >> 31412772 |
Ladislav Hodač1, Simone Klatt1, Diego Hojsgaard1, Timothy F Sharbel2, Elvira Hörandl3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the absence of sex and recombination, genomes are expected to accumulate deleterious mutations via an irreversible process known as Muller's ratchet, especially in the case of polyploidy. In contrast, no genome-wide mutation accumulation was detected in a transcriptome of facultative apomictic, hexaploid plants of the Ranunculus auricomus complex. We hypothesize that mutations cannot accumulate in flowering plants with facultative sexuality because sexual and asexual development concurrently occurs within the same generation. We assume a strong effect of purging selection on reduced gametophytes in the sexual developmental pathway because previously masked recessive deleterious mutations would be exposed to selection.Entities:
Keywords: Apomixis; Haploid selection; Mutation accumulation; Plants; Polyploidy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31412772 PMCID: PMC6694583 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-019-1495-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1Female gametophyte development in facultative apomictic (aposporous) allohexaploid Ranunculus auricomus. The scheme illustrates the parallel development of sexual (upper part) and apomictic (aposporous; lower part) gametophytes and seeds on the same plant (i.e., developmental pathways from megaspore/aposporous initial (a) over female gametophyte (b) to embryo (c). The recessive deleterious mutation is indicated by a red asterisk. In the reduced phase of the sexual development, strong selection (s = 1.0) eliminates mutated gametophytes. The mutation is transmitted into embryo and offspring under weaker selection (s < 1.0). The aposporous development without reduced phase transmits the mutation into embryo and offspring as the mutation remains masked
Genotyping using microsatellite analysis of three progenies of R. carpaticola × R. cassubicifolius. C = maternal clone, M = SSR mutant clone, R = recombinant
| Progeny array (mother plant ID) | No. of progenies | No. of offspring genotypes | No. of C, M and R plants per progeny array | % of recombinant genotypes per progeny arrays |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V (35/28) | 39 | 8 | 31 (C), 4 (M), 4 (R) | 10.26 |
| T (29/15) | 38 | 5 | 34 (C), 1 (M), 3 (R) | 7.89 |
| I (8492/27) | 30 | 6 | 25 (C), 5 (M), 0 (R) | 0.00 |
| Mean | 36 | 6 | 30 (C), 3 (M), 2 (R) | 6.05 |
Fig. 2Abortion rates of viable reproductive units during sexual and aposporous development. Development starts from the megaspore phase (a), continues with gametophyte (b) and the embryo phase (c), and ends with the seedling phase. The major abortion (mean 52%) happens during the reduced female gametophyte (FG) phase (b) of the sexual development (blue dashed line). In comparison, the decline is less steep during the unreduced aposporous female gametophyte phase (solid gray line). These results suggest stronger selection upon the reduced phase (n) of the sexual development than upon the unreduced phase (2n) of the aposporous development. The decline from the embryo stage to the offspring (seedling) stage is in sexual and apomictic offspring almost the same, as germination rates are not significantly different. Proportions of reproductive units are given as means with confidence intervals. Data were adapted from [25, 26]
The speed of Muller’s ratchet under obligate asexuality, assuming fixed population size N = 103 individuals and deleterious mutation rate U = 1.116. n0 = Number of individuals within the least-loaded class, s = selection coefficient, t(J) = interclick time estimate based on Eq. 34 in [28], t(NS) = interclick time estimate based on Eq. 33 in [29] and t(ME) = interclick time estimate based on Eq. 24 [30]; all time estimates are given as numbers of generations per “click”. Bold text = estimates of the selection coefficients of the fastest ratchets; the (J)-value was computed according to Eq. 34 in [28], corresponding to a U-shaped function with a local minimum at s = 0.212, which we considered as a critical value of the fastest ratchet acting on sporophytes
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.340(ME) | 38 | 6649 | 3008 |
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| 0.218(NS) | 6 | 33 |
| 14,006 |
| 0.212(J) | 5 |
| 32 | 16,146 |
Fig. 3Model of mutant offspring decline under constant recombination rate per generation (r ≈ 6%) and three selection coefficients. The strongest selection (s = 1.000) on female and male gametophytes eliminates the mutation in ~ 138 generations (dotted blue line). The medium selection coefficient (s = 0.520), approximating selection on female gametophytes only, eliminates the mutation after ~ 204 generations. The weakest selection coefficient (s = 0.212; derived from [27]) represents selection on the sporophyte only; the mutation is eliminated after ~ 246 generations