Abstract

Identifying the molecular genetic basis of traits contributing to speciation is of crucial importance for understanding the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that generate biodiversity. Despite several examples describing putative “speciation genes,” it is often uncertain to what extent these genetic changes have contributed to gene flow reductions in nature. Therefore, considerable interest lies in characterizing the molecular basis of traits that actively confer reproductive isolation during the early stages of speciation, as these loci can be attributed directly to the process of divergence. In Southern California, two ecotypes of Mimulus aurantiacus are parapatric and differ primarily in flower color, with an anthocyanic, red-flowered morph in the west and an anthocyanin-lacking, yellow-flowered morph in the east. Evidence suggests that the genetic changes responsible for this shift in flower color have been essential for divergence and have become fixed in natural populations of each ecotype due to almost complete differences in pollinator preference. In this study, we demonstrate that a cis-regulatory mutation in an R2R3-MYB transcription factor results in differential regulation of enzymes in the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway and is the major contributor to differences in floral pigmentation. In addition, molecular population genetic data show that, despite gene flow at neutral loci, divergent selection has driven the fixation of alternate alleles at this gene between ecotypes. Therefore, by identifying the genetic basis underlying ecologically based divergent selection in flower color between these ecotypes, we have revealed the ecological and functional mechanisms involved in the evolution of pre-mating isolation at the early stages of incipient speciation.

Highlights

  • Revealing the specific genes and mutations that underlie reproductive isolation provides a window into the evolutionary and molecular mechanisms that drive speciation

  • By screening M. aurantiacus floral complementary DNA, we identified three R2R3-MYB-related genes expressed in M. aurantiacus floral tissue (MaMyb1-MaMyb3)

  • While mutations in at least two loci are involved in flower color differences between the ecotypes [35], we focus here only on the genetic basis of the locus explaining the greatest variation in flower color

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Summary

Introduction

Revealing the specific genes and mutations that underlie reproductive isolation provides a window into the evolutionary and molecular mechanisms that drive speciation. To understand how divergent selection has influenced the speciation process, it is necessary to integrate ecological studies of traits involved in reproductive isolation with molecular and population genetic techniques that can identify the evolutionary forces and genetic changes controlling variation in these traits. By connecting these approaches, it becomes possible to identify the functional and ecological mechanisms that guide the evolution of new species [8]

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