DYNAMICS OF HYBRID INCOMPATIBILITY IN GENE NETWORKS IN A CONSTANT ENVIRONMENT
Open Access
- 29 January 2009
- Vol. 63 (2) , 418-431
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00577.x
Abstract
After an ancestral population splits into two allopatric populations, different mutations may fix in each. When pairs of mutations are brought together in a hybrid offspring, epistasis may cause reduced fitness. Such pairs are known as Bateson–Dobzhansky–Muller (BDM) incompatibilities. A well‐known model of BDM incompatibility due to Orr suggests that the fitness load on hybrids should initially accelerate, and continue to increase as the number of potentially incompatible substitutions increases (the “snowball effect”). In the gene networks model, which violates a key assumption of Orr's model (independence of fixation probabilities), the snowball effect often does not occur. Instead, we describe three possible dynamics in a constant environment: (1) Stabilizing selection can constrain two allopatric populations to remain near‐perfectly compatible. (2) Despite constancy of environment, punctuated evolution may obtain; populations may experience rare adaptations asynchronously, permitting incompatibility. (3) Despite stabilizing selection, developmental system drift may permit genetic change, allowing two populations to drift in and out of compatibility. We reinterpret Orr's model in terms of genetic distance. We extend Orr's model to the finite loci case, which can limit incompatibility. Finally, we suggest that neutral evolution of gene regulation in nature, to the point of speciation, is a distinct possibility.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gene expression variation in African and European populations of Drosophila melanogasterGenome Biology, 2008
- Promoter regions of many neural- and nutrition-related genes have experienced positive selection during human evolutionNature Genetics, 2007
- Divergence of Transcription Factor Binding Sites Across Related Yeast SpeciesScience, 2007
- The frailty of adaptive hypotheses for the origins of organismal complexityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Adaptations to fluctuating selection in DrosophilaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Expression profiling in primates reveals a rapid evolution of human transcription factorsNature, 2006
- Regional Patterns of Gene Expression in Human and Chimpanzee BrainsGenome Research, 2004
- Common Pattern of Evolution of Gene Expression Level and Protein Sequence in DrosophilaMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2004
- Rapid Speciation via Parallel, Directional Selection on Regulatory Genetic PathwaysJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2000
- Percolation on the Fitness Hypercube and the Evolution of Reproductive IsolationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1997