Abstract

BackgroundUnisexuality, or all female reproduction, is rare among vertebrates. Studying these exceptional organisms may give useful information with respect to the evolution and maintenance of sexual reproduction. Poecilia formosa was the first unisexual vertebrate species to be detected and since then has served as a paradigmatic organism for unisexuality and studies on the evolution of sex. It reproduces through gynogenesis, using sperm of males from related species to trigger parthenogenetic development of the unreduced diploid eggs. Like in other unisexual vertebrates, triploids occur in a certain range of P. formosa. It has been suggested that the addition of the host species derived third chromosome set is evolutionary important. Clonal organisms lack sufficient genotypic diversity for adaptive changes to variable environments. Also non-recombining genomes cannot purge deleterious mutations and therefore unisexual organisms should suffer from a genomic decay. Thus, polyploidization leading to triploidy should bring "fresh" genetic material into the asexual lineage. To evaluate the importance of triploidy for maintaining the asexual species, it is important to know whether such an introgression event happens at a reasonable frequency.ResultsIn an earlier study it was found that all triploid P. formosa in the Rio Purificación river system are of monophyletic origin. Here we have analyzed fish from a different river system. Using microsatellite analysis we can show that the triploids from this new location are genetically divergent and most probably of an independent origin.ConclusionOur data support the hypothesis that triploidy was not a single chance event in the evolutionary history of P. formosa and hence might be a relevant mechanism to increase genotypic divergence and at least partially counteract the genetic degeneration connected to asexuality. It is, however, much rarer than in other asexual vertebrates analyzed so far and thus probably only of moderate evolutionary importance for the maintenance of the asexual breeding complex.

Highlights

  • Unisexuality, or all female reproduction, is rare among vertebrates

  • Its mode of reproduction is gynogenesis, a form of parthenogenesis, in which the embryonic development of unreduced diploid eggs is triggered by sperm from males of closely related species

  • Fish with additional microchromosomes readily can form new clones that stably transmit the microchromosome. This phenomenon has been found in laboratory broods as well as in wild populations and occurs obviously at a reasonable frequency [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Unisexuality, or all female reproduction, is rare among vertebrates Studying these exceptional organisms may give useful information with respect to the evolution and maintenance of sexual reproduction. Poecilia formosa was the first unisexual vertebrate species to be detected and since has served as a paradigmatic organism for unisexuality and studies on the evolution of sex. It reproduces through gynogenesis, using sperm of males from related species to trigger parthenogenetic development of the unreduced diploid eggs. Fish with additional microchromosomes readily can form new clones that stably transmit the microchromosome This phenomenon has been found in laboratory broods as well as in wild populations and occurs obviously at a reasonable frequency [9]. Microchromosome carrying fish have been reported only from the Río Purificación [10]

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