Abstract

Reproductive proteins are among the fastest evolving in the proteome, often due to the consequences of positive selection, and their rapid evolution is frequently attributed to a coevolutionary process between interacting female and male proteins. Such a process could leave characteristic signatures at coevolving genes. One signature of coevolution, predicted by sexual selection theory, is an association of alleles between the two genes. Another predicted signature is a correlation of evolutionary rates during divergence due to compensatory evolution. We studied female–male coevolution in the abalone by resequencing sperm lysin and its interacting egg coat protein, VERL, in populations of two species. As predicted, we found intergenic linkage disequilibrium between lysin and VERL, despite our demonstration that they are not physically linked. This finding supports a central prediction of sexual selection using actual genotypes, that of an association between a male trait and its female preference locus. We also created a novel likelihood method to show that lysin and VERL have experienced correlated rates of evolution. These two signatures of coevolution can provide statistical rigor to hypotheses of coevolution and could be exploited for identifying coevolving proteins a priori. We also present polymorphism-based evidence for positive selection and implicate recent selective events at the specific structural regions of lysin and VERL responsible for their species-specific interaction. Finally, we observed deep subdivision between VERL alleles in one species, which matches a theoretical prediction of sexual conflict. Thus, abalone fertilization proteins illustrate how coevolution can lead to reproductive barriers and potentially drive speciation.

Highlights

  • Given the importance of reproduction for evolutionary fitness, one might predict that reproductive proteins would be highly conserved, especially those required for interaction between sperm and egg

  • We followed the sperm–egg coevolutionary process at the level of genes: one that makes the protective egg coat and a sperm gene which opens that coat for fertilization

  • We discovered an association of variants between the egg and sperm genes, the origin of which could be strong preference for compatible variants

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Summary

Introduction

Given the importance of reproduction for evolutionary fitness, one might predict that reproductive proteins would be highly conserved, especially those required for interaction between sperm and egg. Several fertilization proteins are driven to change at the specific regions mediating sperm-egg recognition This observation stands in stark contrast to the general conservation of interaction interfaces. Regardless of which force drives their initial divergence, the interaction between sperm and egg should be maintained through coevolution, in which one or both proteins adaptively compensate for changes in the other. Such female-male coevolution has often been proposed to contribute to the rapid evolution of reproductive proteins [3,4,5,6], but specific tests of this hypothesis have not been performed

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