Abstract
Self‐incompatibility (SI) is a self‐recognition genetic system enforcing outcrossing in hermaphroditic flowering plants and results in one of the arguably best understood forms of natural (balancing) selection maintaining genetic variation over long evolutionary times. A rich theoretical and empirical population genetics literature has considerably clarified how the distribution of SI phenotypes translates into fitness differences among individuals by a combination of inbreeding avoidance and rare‐allele advantage. At the same time, the molecular mechanisms by which self‐pollen is specifically recognized and rejected have been described in exquisite details in several model organisms, such that the genotype‐to‐phenotype map is also pretty well understood, notably in the Brassicaceae. Here, we review recent advances in these two fronts and illustrate how the joint availability of detailed characterization of genotype‐to‐phenotype and phenotype‐to‐fitness maps on a single genetic system (plant self‐incompatibility) provides the opportunity to understand the evolutionary process in a unique perspective, bringing novel insight on general questions about the emergence, maintenance, and diversification of a complex genetic system.
Highlights
The flower is the defining organ of angiosperms and is associated with the spectacular diversification of this group of plants (Soltis & Soltis, 2014)
While flowers in extant species display an astonishing diversity of sizes, shapes, colors, and functions, a central feature of their ancestral state, hermaphroditism, has remained widespread (Sauquet et al, 2017), bringing pollen-producing anthers in close physical proximity with the entry of female reproductive tracts
It follows that the structure of this reproductive organ can cause self-pollination to be very common, such that the potential for sexual reproduction by selfing is high
Summary
Eléonore Durand1 | Maxime Chantreau1 | Audrey Le Veve1 | Roman Stetsenko1 | Manu Dubin1 | Mathieu Genete1 | Violaine Llaurens2 | Céline Poux1 | Camille Roux1 | Sylvain Billiard1 | Xavier Vekemans1 | Vincent Castric. Funding information European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: 648321; Agence Nationale de la Recherche, Grant/Award Number: ANR-11JSV7-008
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