Data from: Genomic imprinting, disrupted placental expression, and speciation
The importance of regulatory incompatibilities to the early stages of speciation remains unclear. Hybrid mammals often show extreme parent-of-origin growth effects that are thought to be a consequence of disrupted genetic imprinting (parent-specific epigenetic gene silencing) during early developmen...
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Zusammenfassung: | The importance of regulatory incompatibilities to the early stages of
speciation remains unclear. Hybrid mammals often show extreme
parent-of-origin growth effects that are thought to be a consequence of
disrupted genetic imprinting (parent-specific epigenetic gene silencing)
during early development. Here we test the long-standing hypothesis that
abnormal hybrid growth reflects disrupted gene expression due to loss of
imprinting (LOI) in hybrid placentas, resulting in dosage imbalances
between paternal growth factors and maternal growth repressors. We
analyzed placental gene expression in reciprocal dwarf hamster hybrids
that show extreme parent-of-origin growth effects relative to their
parental species. In massively enlarged hybrid placentas, we observed both
extensive transgressive expression of growth-related genes and bi-allelic
expression of many genes that were paternally silenced in normal sized
hybrids. However, the apparent widespread disruption of paternal silencing
was coupled with reduced gene expression levels overall. These patterns
are contrary to the predictions of the LOI model and indicate that hybrid
misexpression of dosage sensitive genes is caused by other regulatory
mechanisms in this system. Collectively, our results support a central
role for disrupted gene expression and imprinting in the evolution of
mammalian hybrid inviability, but call into question the generality of the
widely invoked LOI model. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.j0j5k |