Relative rates of evolution of male-beneficial nuclear compensatory mutations and male-harming Mother’s Curse mitochondrial alleles

Author:

Dapper Amy L1,Diegel Amanda E2,Wade Michael J3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Mississippi State University , Mississippi State, MS , United States

2. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Mississippi State University , Mississippi State, MS , United States

3. Department of Biology, Indiana University , Bloomington, IN , United States

Abstract

Abstract Mother’s Curse alleles represent a significant source of potential male fitness defects. The maternal inheritance of mutations with the pattern of sex-specific fitness effects, s♀>0>s♂, allows Mother’s Curse alleles to spread through a population even though they reduce male fitness. Although the mitochondrial genomes of animals contain only a handful of protein-coding genes, mutations in many of these genes have been shown to have a direct effect on male fertility. The evolutionary process of nuclear compensation is hypothesized to counteract the male-limited mitochondrial defects that spread via Mother’s Curse. Here we use population genetic models to investigate the evolution of compensatory autosomal nuclear mutations that act to restore the loss of fitness caused by mitochondrial mutation pressures. We derive the rate of male fitness deterioration by Mother’s Curse and the rate of restoration by nuclear compensatory evolution. We find that the rate of nuclear gene compensation is many times slower than that of its deterioration by cytoplasmic mutation pressure, resulting in a significant lag in the recovery of male fitness. Thus, the numbers of nuclear genes capable of restoring male mitochondrial fitness defects must be large in order to sustain male fitness in the face of mutation pressures.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference65 articles.

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