Speciation by postzygotic isolation: forces, genes and molecules
@article{Orr2000SpeciationBP,
title={Speciation by postzygotic isolation: forces, genes and molecules},
author={H. Allen Orr and Daven C Presgraves},
journal={BioEssays},
year={2000},
volume={22}
}New species arise as reproductive isolation evolves between diverging populations. Here we review recent work in the genetics of postzygotic reproductive isolation—the sterility and inviability of species hybrids. Over the last few years, research has taken two new directions. First, we have begun to learn a good deal about the population genetic forces driving the evolution of postzygotic isolation. It has, for instance, become increasingly clear that conflict‐driven processes, like sexual…
229 Citations
SPECIATION DESPITE GENE FLOW WHEN DEVELOPMENTAL PATHWAYS EVOLVE
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
- 2002
It is shown that, although gene exchange does inhibit this process, it is the proportion of migrants exchanged rather than the number of migrants that is critical, and rates as high as 16 individuals exchanged per generation still permit the evolution of postzygotic isolation.
The molecular basis of speciation: from patterns to processes, rules to mechanisms
- BiologyJournal of Genetics
- 2008
A new ‘hierarchical faster-sex’ theory is proposed: the rapid evolution of sex and reproduction-related genes (SRR) genes in combination with the preferential involvement of the X-chromosome (hemizygous X-effects) and sexually selected male traits (faster-male evolution).
Mimicry: developmental genes that contribute to speciation
- BiologyEvolution & development
- 2003
The genetics of Müllerian mimicry in Heliconius cydno and H. melpomene is described, suggesting color pattern evolution is constrained by preexisting linked elements that may have arisen via tandem duplication rather than having been assembled by natural selection.
Comparative studies on speciation: 30 years since Coyne and Orr
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
- 2021
This work revisits the five questions addressed by Coyne and Orr, identifying results that remain well supported and others that seem less robust with new data, and considers the future of speciation research, with emphasis on areas where novel methods and data motivate potential progress.
GENES IN EVOLUTION: THE CONTROL OF DIVERSITY AND SPECIATION Speciation genes in plants
- Biology
- 2010
The most surprising conclusion from this review is that identities of genes underlying both prezyGotic and postzygotic RI are often predictable in a broad sense from the phenotype of the reproductive barrier.
Adaptive evolution drives divergence of a hybrid inviability gene between two species of Drosophila
- BiologyNature
- 2003
This work identifies a gene that causes epistatic inviability in hybrids between two fruitfly species and reveals that this gene—which encodes a nuclear pore protein—evolved by positive natural selection in both species' lineages.
Speciation genes in plants.
- BiologyAnnals of botany
- 2010
This review discusses the identities and attributes of genes that contribute to reproductive isolation (RI) in plants, compares them with animal speciation genes and investigates what these genes can tell us about speciation.
Polymorphism of postmating reproductive isolation within plant species
- Biology
- 2010
This work focuses on three genic mechanisms often held responsible for reproductive isolation between species: Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller (BDM) incompatibilities and two widespread types of genomic conflict, transmission ratio distortion and cytonuclear interactions.
Chromosomal inversions and the reproductive isolation of species
- BiologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- 2001
It is suggested that inversions create linkage groups that cause sterility to persist between hybridizing taxa, and natural selection will have a greater opportunity to decrease the frequency of interspecies matings.
Sex and Speciation: Drosophila Reproductive Tract Proteins— Twenty Five Years Later
- BiologyInternational journal of evolutionary biology
- 2012
Some of the major and current fields of research that have greatly contributed to the understanding of the evolutionary dynamics and importance of SRR genes and genetic systems in understanding reproductive biology and speciation are reviewed.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 70 REFERENCES
Genetic analysis of speciation by means of introgression into Drosophila melanogaster.
- BiologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- 2000
It is shown that this hybridization can permit systematic and precise delineation of the genetic and molecular basis of speciation, and the extent of interspecific genetic divergence underlying hybrid male sterility is far greater than expected.
The population genetics of speciation: the evolution of hybrid incompatibilities.
- BiologyGenetics
- 1995
The number of genic incompatibilities between taxa increases much faster than linearly with time, and it is "easier" to evolve complex hybrid incomp atibilities requiring the simultaneous action of three or more loci than to evolve simple incompatibles between pairs of genes.
Sex-related genes, directional sexual selection, and speciation.
- BiologyMolecular biology and evolution
- 1998
The results suggest that directional sexual selection has shaped the evolution of sex-related genes and that these changes have more likely occurred during the early stages of speciation.
“PATTERNS OF SPECIATION IN DROSOPHILA” REVISITED
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
- 1997
The data from Drosophila are unique-and are likely to remain so-because of the large number of crossable species and the ease of estimating sexual and postzygotic isolation in the laboratory, and some estimates of reproductive isolation and phylogenetic relatedness when better data became available are revised.
Genetic basis of male sterility in hybrids between two closely related species of Drosophila.
- BiologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- 1984
Genetic analysis of male sterility in hybrids between these species shows that at least five loci are responsible for this reproductive isolation, which implies that the true genetic divergence for sterility is even greater than previously thought.
Further characterization of the Odysseus locus of hybrid sterility in Drosophila: one gene is not enough.
- BiologyGenetics
- 1995
It is demonstrated that, while Ods appears to be a discrete element, it requires other nearby gene(s) to be cointrogressed to confer full hybrid sterility effect and is in agreement with the view that reproductive isolation between closely related species of Drosophila is usually caused by several genes of weak effect from the same species that interact strongly among themselves as well as with the foreign genetic background.
Genetics of reproductive isolation in the Drosophila simulans clade: DNA marker-assisted mapping and characterization of a hybrid-male sterility gene, Odysseus (Ods).
- BiologyGenetics
- 1993
Two genetic and molecular analyses suggest the presence of a major sterility factor from D. mauritiana, which is named Odysseus (Ods), in the cytological interval of 16D, and formalize three criteria for inferring the existence of amajor gene within an introgression.
Mapping and characterization of a 'speciation gene' in Drosophila.
- BiologyGenetical research
- 1992
This analysis shows that sterility of D. melanogaster males who carry the 'dot' fourth chromosome from D. simulans is due entirely to a very small region of the D. similans chromosome.
DIVERGENCE OF MEIOTIC DRIVE‐SUPPRESSION SYSTEMS AS AN EXPLANATION FOR SEX‐BIASED HYBRID STERILITY AND INVIABILITY
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
- 1991
It is shown that divergence of meiotic drive systems can explain the two generalizations about speciation even if large departures from Mendelian segregation are rarely observed.
Rescue of hybrid sterility in crosses between D. melanogaster and D. simulans
- BiologyNature
- 1996
THE genetic analysis of reproductive isolation between species of Drosophila has now reached the resolution necessary1,2 to start answering one of the fundamental questions of evolution: what is the…