help  | about  | cite  | software

Publication : Adaptive evolution drives divergence of a hybrid inviability gene between two species of Drosophila.

First Author  Presgraves Daven C Year  2003
Journal  Nature Volume  423
Pages  715-9 PubMed ID  12802326
Abstract Text  Speciation--the splitting of one species into two--occurs by the evolution of any of several forms of reproductive isolation between taxa, including the intrinsic sterility and inviability of hybrids. Abundant evidence shows that these hybrid fitness problems are caused by incompatible interactions between loci: new alleles that become established in one species are sometimes functionally incompatible with alleles at interacting loci from another species. However, almost nothing is known about the genes involved in such hybrid incompatibilities or the evolutionary forces that drive their divergence. Here we identify a gene that causes epistatic inviability in hybrids between two fruitfly species, Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans. Our population genetic analysis reveals that this gene--which encodes a nuclear pore protein--evolved by positive natural selection in both species' lineages. These results show that a lethal hybrid incompatibility has evolved as a by-product of adaptive protein evolution. Doi  10.1038/nature01679
Issue  6941 Month  Jun

Publication Annotations Displayer

28 Entities

20 Mesh Terms