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Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids

INTRODUCTION: Hybridization is a common phenomenon in fish and is considered to be a major source of diversification. Deciphering the remoulding of genomic regions and phenotypes in zones where hybrid specimens occur is of particular interest to elucidate the emergence of evolutionary novelties. Thi...

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Autores principales: Sinama, Melthide, Gilles, André, Costedoat, Caroline, Corse, Emmanuel, Olivier, Jean-Michel, Chappaz, Rémi, Pech, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3664599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23634901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-10-22
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author Sinama, Melthide
Gilles, André
Costedoat, Caroline
Corse, Emmanuel
Olivier, Jean-Michel
Chappaz, Rémi
Pech, Nicolas
author_facet Sinama, Melthide
Gilles, André
Costedoat, Caroline
Corse, Emmanuel
Olivier, Jean-Michel
Chappaz, Rémi
Pech, Nicolas
author_sort Sinama, Melthide
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Hybridization is a common phenomenon in fish and is considered to be a major source of diversification. Deciphering the remoulding of genomic regions and phenotypes in zones where hybrid specimens occur is of particular interest to elucidate the emergence of evolutionary novelties. This approach is particularly challenging because the first step of hybridization seems to be the most important stage in the emergence of hybrid lineages. However, the signal can be significantly altered after only a few generations. RESULTS: We studied 41 microsatellites and partial cytochrome b gene sequences in 970 specimens belonging to two fish species (Chondrostoma nasus and Parachondrostoma toxostoma) in allopatric/parapatric zones, hybrids between them in a natural sympatric zone: the Ardèche basin. We showed that the genomic architecture in hybrids presented pattern heterogeneity of selection for the different loci. Indeed, the upstream part of the river (Rosières and Labeaume) presented an overdominant fitness of heterozygotes (12.20%) corresponding to a genomic compatibility, and underselection was observed for 4.88%-7.32% of the loci tested indicating a genomic incompatibility. Moreover the upstream station (Rosières) presented a positive selection of invasive C. nasus homozygotes (17.07% to 21.95%) indicating that hybridization may increase the fitness of admixed individuals. We showed that hybrid morphology (body shape based on 21 landmarks) correlated with genomic dilution indicating a species fingerprint. However, we demonstrated that the hybrid morphology was not a linear modification between the two parental species but a trade-off between several correlated traits. CONCLUSIONS: Hybrid specimens present a mosaic of genomic combination, showing regions with genomic compatibility and others with genomic incompatibility between the two species. Positive selection (invasive advantage ranging from 9.76% to 21.95% of the loci) was evidenced in the upstream part of the Ardèche indicating that environmental selection makes a substantial contribution. Although the presence of a dam is known to impose heterogeneous hybrid zones between these two species, we demonstrated in this study that a natural environment can also generate a hybrid zone with a large number (and diversity) of hybrids. The combination of the two genomes in the hybrids results in complex ontogenetic trajectories (with different morphological traits evolving at different rates) that correspond to novel developmental pathways.
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spelling pubmed-36645992013-06-04 Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids Sinama, Melthide Gilles, André Costedoat, Caroline Corse, Emmanuel Olivier, Jean-Michel Chappaz, Rémi Pech, Nicolas Front Zool Research INTRODUCTION: Hybridization is a common phenomenon in fish and is considered to be a major source of diversification. Deciphering the remoulding of genomic regions and phenotypes in zones where hybrid specimens occur is of particular interest to elucidate the emergence of evolutionary novelties. This approach is particularly challenging because the first step of hybridization seems to be the most important stage in the emergence of hybrid lineages. However, the signal can be significantly altered after only a few generations. RESULTS: We studied 41 microsatellites and partial cytochrome b gene sequences in 970 specimens belonging to two fish species (Chondrostoma nasus and Parachondrostoma toxostoma) in allopatric/parapatric zones, hybrids between them in a natural sympatric zone: the Ardèche basin. We showed that the genomic architecture in hybrids presented pattern heterogeneity of selection for the different loci. Indeed, the upstream part of the river (Rosières and Labeaume) presented an overdominant fitness of heterozygotes (12.20%) corresponding to a genomic compatibility, and underselection was observed for 4.88%-7.32% of the loci tested indicating a genomic incompatibility. Moreover the upstream station (Rosières) presented a positive selection of invasive C. nasus homozygotes (17.07% to 21.95%) indicating that hybridization may increase the fitness of admixed individuals. We showed that hybrid morphology (body shape based on 21 landmarks) correlated with genomic dilution indicating a species fingerprint. However, we demonstrated that the hybrid morphology was not a linear modification between the two parental species but a trade-off between several correlated traits. CONCLUSIONS: Hybrid specimens present a mosaic of genomic combination, showing regions with genomic compatibility and others with genomic incompatibility between the two species. Positive selection (invasive advantage ranging from 9.76% to 21.95% of the loci) was evidenced in the upstream part of the Ardèche indicating that environmental selection makes a substantial contribution. Although the presence of a dam is known to impose heterogeneous hybrid zones between these two species, we demonstrated in this study that a natural environment can also generate a hybrid zone with a large number (and diversity) of hybrids. The combination of the two genomes in the hybrids results in complex ontogenetic trajectories (with different morphological traits evolving at different rates) that correspond to novel developmental pathways. BioMed Central 2013-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3664599/ /pubmed/23634901 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-10-22 Text en Copyright © 2013 Sinama et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Sinama, Melthide
Gilles, André
Costedoat, Caroline
Corse, Emmanuel
Olivier, Jean-Michel
Chappaz, Rémi
Pech, Nicolas
Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title_full Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title_fullStr Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title_full_unstemmed Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title_short Non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
title_sort non-homogeneous combination of two porous genomes induces complex body shape trajectories in cyprinid hybrids
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3664599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23634901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-10-22
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