Abstract

SummaryThe multiple mating type system of the Ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila is a self/non-self recognition system, whose specificity resides in a head-to-head, functionally distinct pair of genes, MTA and MTB. We have now sequenced and analyzed these mating type genes in nine additional Tetrahymena species. We conclude that MTA and MTB are derived from a common ancestral gene and have co-evolved for at least ∼150 Myr. We show that T. shanghaiensis, a perpetual selfer (unisexual) species, has a single mating type gene pair, whose MTA and MTB genes likely have different mating type specificity. We document the recent replacement of a complete different set of mating type specificities for another, illustrating how quickly this can happen. We discuss how varying conditions of reproductive stress could result in evolutionary co-adaptations of MTA and MTB genes and changes in mating type determination mechanisms.

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