Nuclear-Cytoplasmic Conflict in Hybrids of Roach Rutilus rutilus and Bream Abramis brama as a Consequence of the Species Divergence in Body and Genome Sizes
The species divergence in body size is often associated with changes in the genome size and the rate of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) evolution. In the course of hybridization of species with different body sizes, these differences can lead to the problems of nuclear-cytoplasmic compatibility and to the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Inland water biology 2023-02, Vol.16 (1), p.106-118 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The species divergence in body size is often associated with changes in the genome size and the rate of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) evolution. In the course of hybridization of species with different body sizes, these differences can lead to the problems of nuclear-cytoplasmic compatibility and to the activation of the embryonic genome that are manifested in hybrids as developmental anomalies and a decrease in adaptability. The bream
Abramis brama
(L.) is larger than the roach
Rutilus rutilus
(L.) in body and genome sizes. Previously, a change in the donor genome of male to the level of maternal species was established in the first generation of hybrids by the ITS1 region of ribosomal DNA, which can presumably affect the inheritance of morphological traits from the paternal species and, particularly, body size. The body length and height, as well as a number of diagnostic morphological traits, are measured, and genotyping (rDNA ITS1 and mtDNA cyt
b
) of underyearlings and mature individuals of the bream, roach, F1 hybrids and underyearlings of backcrosses is carried out. Sexually mature hybrids of both directions of crossing were similar in body length to
R. rutilus,
which indicates a violation of the paternal effect when inheriting the body length of a larger species (bream). A violation of the inheritance of
A. brama
body length in the hybrids of
R. rutilus
×
A. brama
(♀R |
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ISSN: | 1995-0829 1995-0837 |
DOI: | 10.1134/S1995082923010157 |