Abstract

The cave environment is consistently radically different than the surface environment because it lacks light, and animals adapting to cave life are subject to strong selective forces much different than those experienced by their ancestors who evolved in the presence of light. As such, their divergence from surface ancestors and eventual speciation is likely to be driven by the shift in ecology. We report here that hybrids between cave and surface Astyanax mexicanus fishes produce offspring with allelic frequencies that differ significantly from Mendelian expectations both for transmission ratios and for independent assortment of unlinked markers. Comparison of allelic content of DNA from fin clips and sperm pools show that the transmission ratio distortion likely occurs during spermatogenesis. Departures from expectations of independent assortment are essentially epistatic phenomena generating linkage disequilibrium. A novel analysis of the epistatic interactions reveals an apparent network of interactions among genes known or suspected to be involved in cave adaptation, implying that the epistasis arose as a “by product” of the divergence due to cave adaptation.

Highlights

  • Divergent selection between dissimilar habitats can drive phenotypic differentiation of separate populations, with speciation an eventual result if the genetic changes lead to reproductive isolation

  • Speciation driven in this way is known as ‘‘ecological speciation’’ and is believed to come about when alleles selected in the new environment cause reproductive isolation as a pleiotropic ‘‘by product’’ of their selection [1,2]

  • We report below two distinct patterns of non-random allelic transmission by F1 hybrids to offspring: 1) transmission ratio distortion and 2) epistatic departures from independent assortment of alleles at unlinked loci

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Summary

Introduction

Divergent selection between dissimilar habitats can drive phenotypic differentiation of separate populations, with speciation an eventual result if the genetic changes lead to reproductive isolation. On in the mapping studies we observed that many loci exhibited significant patterns of transmission ratio distortion.

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