Abstract

Hybrids between species are often sterile or inviable. Hybrid unfitness usually evolves first in the heterogametic sex-a pattern known as Haldane's rule. The genetics of Haldane's rule have been extensively studied in species where the male is the heterogametic (XX/XY) sex, but its basis in taxa where the female is heterogametic (ZW/ZZ), such as Lepidoptera and birds, is largely unknown. Here, we analyse a new case of female hybrid sterility between geographic subspecies of Heliconius pardalinus. The two subspecies mate freely in captivity, but female F1hybrids in both directions of cross are sterile. Sterility is due to arrested development of oocytes after they become differentiated from nurse cells, but before yolk deposition. We backcrossed fertile male F1hybrids to parental females and mapped quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for female sterility. We also identified genes differentially expressed in the ovary as a function of oocyte development. The Z chromosome has a major effect, similar to the 'large X effect' in Drosophila, with strong epistatic interactions between loci at either end of the Z chromosome, and between the Z chromosome and autosomal loci on chromosomes 8 and 20. By intersecting the list of genes within these QTLs with those differentially expressed in sterile and fertile hybrids, we identified three candidate genes with relevant phenotypes. This study is the first to characterize hybrid sterility using genome mapping in the Lepidoptera and shows that it is produced by multiple complex epistatic interactions often involving the sex chromosome, as predicted by the dominance theory of Haldane's rule.

Highlights

  • Hybrids between diverging populations may be sterile or inviable (Darwin, 1859; Presgraves, 2010)

  • We show that crossing H. p. butleri and H. p. sergestus in both directions results in F1 hybrid females that are sterile due to disrupted oocyte development, and QTL analysis of backcrosses to H. p. butleri shows that sterility is sex-linked

  • The genetics of Haldane's rule and Dobzhansky–Muller incompatibilities have been extensively studied in Drosophila and a few other male heterogametic systems, but hitherto there has been little genomic work on female heterogametic systems

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Summary

Introduction

Hybrids between diverging populations may be sterile or inviable (Darwin, 1859; Presgraves, 2010). Because such postzygotic incompatibilities are common between species, elucidating their genetic basis is seen as key to understanding speciation (Butlin et al, 2012; Castillo & Barbash, 2017; Coughlan & Matute, 2020; Nosil & Schluter, 2011). Previously untested combinations of alleles at different loci are brought together and interact to reduce fitness (Brideau et al, 2006; Maheshwari & Barbash, 2011; Orr, 1995; Presgraves, 2007; Tang & Presgraves, 2009)

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