Selection with two alleles of X-linkage and its application to the fitness component analysis of OdsH in Drosophila

Author:

Sun Sha12ORCID,Ting Chau-Ti13ORCID,Wu Chung-I14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago , Chicago, IL 60637 , USA

2. Department of Developmental and Cell Biology, University of California, Irvine , Irvine, CA 92697 , USA

3. Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, National Taiwan University , Taipei 106 , Taiwan

4. School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University , Guangzhou 510275 , China

Abstract

Abstract In organisms with the XY sex-determination system, there is an imbalance in the inheritance and transmission of the X chromosome between males and females. Unlike an autosomal allele, an X-linked recessive allele in a female will have phenotypic effects on its male counterpart. Thus, genes located on the X chromosome are of particular interest to researchers in molecular evolution and genetics. Here we present a model for selection with two alleles of X-linkage to understand fitness components associated with genes on the X chromosome. We apply this model to the fitness analysis of an X-linked gene, OdsH (16D), in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. The function of OdsH is involved in sperm production and the gene is rapidly evolving under positive selection. Using site-directed gene targeting, we generated functional and defective OdsH variants tagged with the eye-color marker gene white. We compare the allele frequency changes of the two OdsH variants, each directly competing against a wild-type OdsH allele in concurrent but separate experimental populations. After 20 generations, the two genetically modified OdsH variants displayed a 40% difference in allele frequencies, with the functional OdsH variant demonstrating an advantage over the defective variant. Using maximum likelihood estimation, we determined the fitness components associated with the OdsH alleles in males and females. Our analysis revealed functional aspects of the fitness determinants associated with OdsH, and that sex-specific fertility and viability consequences both contribute to selection on an X-linked gene.

Funder

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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