Data from: Cryptic haplotype-specific gamete selection yields offspring with optimal MHC immune genes
Females choose specific mates in order to produce fitter offspring. However, several factors interfere with females' control over fertilization of their eggs, including sneaker males and phenotypically unpredictable allele segregation during meiosis. Mate choice at the individual level thus pro...
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Zusammenfassung: | Females choose specific mates in order to produce fitter offspring.
However, several factors interfere with females' control over
fertilization of their eggs, including sneaker males and phenotypically
unpredictable allele segregation during meiosis. Mate choice at the
individual level thus provides only a poor approximation for obtaining the
best genetic match. Consequently, post-copulatory sperm selection by
female oocytes has been proposed as a mechanism to achieve complementary
combinations of parental haplotypes. Here, using controlled in vitro
fertilization of three-spined stickleback eggs, we find haplotype-specific
fertilization bias towards gametes with complementary major
histocompatibility complex (MHC) immunogenes. The resulting zygote (and
thus offspring) genotypes exhibit an intermediate level of individual MHC
diversity that was previously shown to confer highest pathogen resistance.
Our finding of haplotype-specific gamete selection thus represents an
intriguing mechanism for fine-tuned optimization of the offspring's
immune gene composition and an evolutionary advantage in the Red Queen
dynamics of host-parasite coevolution. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.bp11pv2 |