Data from: Detection of genetic incompatibilities in non-model systems using simple genetic markers: hybrid breakdown in the haplodiploid spider mite Tetranychus evansi
When two related species interbreed, their hybrid offspring frequently suffer from reduced fitness. The genetics of hybrid incompatibility are described by the Bateson–Dobzhansky–Muller (BDM) model, where fitness is reduced by epistatic interactions between alleles of heterospecific origin. Unfortun...
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Zusammenfassung: | When two related species interbreed, their hybrid offspring frequently
suffer from reduced fitness. The genetics of hybrid incompatibility are
described by the Bateson–Dobzhansky–Muller (BDM) model, where fitness is
reduced by epistatic interactions between alleles of heterospecific
origin. Unfortunately, most empirical evidence for the BDM model comes
from a few well-studied model organisms, restricting our genetic
understanding of hybrid incompatibilities to limited taxa. These systems
are predominantly diploid and incompatibility is often complete, which
complicates the detection of recessive allelic interactions and excludes
the possibility to study viable or intermediate stages. Here, we advocate
research into non-model organisms with haploid or haplodiploid
reproductive systems and incomplete hybrid incompatibility because (1)
dominance is absent in haploids and (2) incomplete incompatibility allows
comparing affected with unaffected individuals. We describe a novel
two-locus statistic specifying the frequency of individuals for which two
alleles co-occur. This approach to studying BDM incompatibilities requires
genotypic characterization of hybrid individuals, but not genetic mapping
or genome sequencing. To illustrate our approach, we investigated genetic
causes for hybrid incompatibility between differentiated lineages of the
haplodiploid spider mite Tetranychus evansi, and show that strong, but
incomplete, hybrid breakdown occurs. In addition, by comparing the
genotypes of viable hybrid males and inviable hybrid male eggs for eight
microsatellite loci, we show that nuclear and cytonuclear BDM interactions
constitute the basis of hybrid incompatibility in this species. Our
approach opens up possibilities to study BDM interactions in non-model
taxa, and may give further insight into the genetic mechanisms behind
hybrid incompatibility. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.0j4m5 |