Mother’s curse and indirect genetic effects: do males matter to mitochondrial genome evolution?
Maternal inheritance of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was originally thought to prevent any response to selection on male phenotypic variation attributable to mtDNA, resulting in a male-biased mtDNA mutation load (‘mother’s curse’). However, the theory underpinning this claim implicitly assumes that a m...
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Zusammenfassung: | Maternal inheritance of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was originally thought
to prevent any response to selection on male phenotypic variation
attributable to mtDNA, resulting in a male-biased mtDNA mutation load
(‘mother’s curse’). However, the theory underpinning this claim implicitly
assumes that a male’s mtDNA has no effect on the fitness of females he
comes into contact with. If such ‘mitochondrially-encoded indirect
genetics effects’ (mtIGEs) do in fact exist, and there is relatedness
between the mitochondrial genomes of interacting males and females, male
mtDNA-encoded traits can undergo adaptation after all. We tested this
possibility using strains of Drosophila melanogaster that differ in their
mtDNA. Our experiments indicate that female fitness is influenced by the
mtDNA carried by males that the females encounter, which could plausibly
allow the mitochondrial genome to evolve via kin selection. We argue that
mtIGEs are probably common, and that this might ameliorate or exacerbate
mother’s curse. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.612jm63zv |