Pleiotropic effects of sex-determining genes in the evolution of dioecy in two plant species

Author:

Akagi Takashi12ORCID,Charlesworth Deborah3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University, Okayama 700-8530, Japan

2. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), PRESTO, Kawaguchi-shi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan

3. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Charlotte Auerbach Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FL, UK

Abstract

One reason for studying sex chromosomes of flowering plants is that they have often evolved separate sexes recently, and the genomes of dioecious species may not yet have evolved adaptations to their changes from the ancestral state. An unstudied question concerns the relative importance of such adaptation, versus the effects of the mutations that led to separate sexes in the first place. Theoretical models for such an evolutionary change make the prediction that the mutations that created males must have sexually antagonistic effects, not only abolishing female functions, but also increasing male functions relative to the ancestral functional hermaphrodites. It is important to test this critical assumption. Moreover, the involvement of sexual antagonism also implies that plant sex-determining genes may directly cause some of the sexual dimorphisms observed in dioecious plants. Sex-determining genes are starting to be uncovered in plants, including species in the genera Diospyros and Actinidia (families Ebenaceae and Actinidiaceae, respectively). Here, we describe transgenic experiments in which the effects of the very different male-determining genes of these two dioecious species were studied in a non-dioecious plant, Nicotiana tabacum . The results indeed support the critical assumption outlined above.

Funder

Precursory Research for Embryonic Science and Technology

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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