From heterosis to outbreeding depression: genotype-by-environment interaction shifts hybrid fitness in opposite directions

Author:

Wang Haolong12ORCID,Su Baofeng23,Zhang Ying12,Shang Mei3,Li Shangjia3,Xing De3,Wang Jinhai3,Bern Logan3,Johnson Andrew3,Al-Armanazi Jacob3,Hasin Tasnuba3,Hettiarachchi Darshika3,Paladines Parrales Abel3,Dilawar Hamza3,Bruce Timothy J3,Dunham Rex A23,Wang Xu1245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University , Auburn, AL 36849 , USA

2. Auburn University Center for Advanced Science, Innovation, and Commerce, Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station , Auburn, AL 36849 , USA

3. School of Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aquatic Sciences, Auburn University , Auburn, AL 36849 , USA

4. Scott-Ritchey Research Center, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University , Auburn, AL 36849 , USA

5. HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology , Huntsville, AL 35806 , USA

Abstract

Abstract In F1 hybrids, phenotypic values are expected to be near the parental means under additive effects or close to one parent under dominance. However, F1 traits can fall outside the parental range, and outbreeding depression occurs when inferior fitness is observed in hybrids. Another possible outcome is heterosis, a phenomenon that interspecific hybrids or intraspecific crossbred F1s exhibit improved fitness compared to both parental species or strains. As an application of heterosis, hybrids between channel catfish females and blue catfish males are superior in feed conversion efficiency, carcass yield, and harvestability. Over 20 years of hybrid catfish production in experimental settings and farming practices generated abundant phenotypic data, making it an ideal system to investigate heterosis. In this study, we characterized fitness in terms of growth and survival longitudinally, revealing environment-dependent heterosis. In ponds, hybrids outgrow both parents due to an extra rapid growth phase of 2–4 months in year 2. This bimodal growth pattern is unique to F1 hybrids in pond culture environments only. In sharp contrast, the same genetic types cultured in tanks display outbreeding depression, where hybrids perform poorly, while channel catfish demonstrate superiority in growth throughout development. Our findings represent the first example, known to the authors, of opposite fitness shifts in response to environmental changes in interspecific vertebrate hybrids, suggesting a broader fitness landscape for F1 hybrids. Future genomic studies based on this experiment will help understand genome-environment interaction in shaping the F1 progeny fitness in the scenario of environment-dependent heterosis and outbreeding depression.

Funder

USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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