| Literature DB >> 32438467 |
Katrine K Lund-Hansen1,2, Jessica K Abbott1, Edward H Morrow3.
Abstract
A handful of studies have investigated sexually antagonistic constraints on achieving sex-specific fitness optima, although exclusively through male-genome-limited evolution experiments. In this article, we established a female-limited X chromosome evolution experiment, where we used an X chromosome balancer to enforce the inheritance of the X through the matriline, thus removing exposure to male selective constraints. This approach eliminates the effects of sexually antagonistic selection on the X chromosome, permitting evolution toward a single sex-specific optimum. After multiple generations of selection, we found strong evidence that body size and development time had moved toward a female-specific optimum, whereas reproductive fitness and locomotion activity remained unchanged. The changes in body size and development time are consistent with previous results, and suggest that the X chromosome is enriched for sexually antagonistic genetic variation controlling these particular traits. The lack of change in reproductive fitness and locomotion activity could be due to a number of mutually nonexclusive explanations, including a lack of sexually antagonistic variance on the X chromosome for those traits or confounding effects of the use of the balancer chromosome. This study is the first to employ female-genome-limited selection and adds to the understanding of the complexity of sexually antagonistic genetic variation.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila melanogaster; experimental evolution; intralocus sexual conflict; sex chromosomes; sexual antagonism
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32438467 DOI: 10.1111/evo.14021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694