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Pleiotropic Effects of a Mitochondrial–Nuclear Incompatibility Depend upon the Accelerating Effect of Temperature in Drosophila

Luke A. Hoekstra, +2 more
- 01 Nov 2013 - 
- Vol. 195, Iss: 3, pp 1129-1139
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TLDR
It is found that temperature strongly modifies the pleiotropic phenotypic effects of an incompatible interaction between a Drosophila melanogaster polymorphism in the nuclear-encoded, mitochondrial tyrosyl-transfer (t)RNA synthetase and a D. simulans polymorphisms in the mitochondrially encoded tRNATyr, suggesting the epistatic fitness effects of metabolic mutations may generally be conditional on the thermal environment.
Abstract
Interactions between mitochondrial and nuclear gene products that underlie eukaryotic energy metabolism can cause the fitness effects of mutations in one genome to be conditional on variation in the other genome. In ectotherms, the effects of these interactions are likely to depend upon the thermal environment, because increasing temperature accelerates molecular rates. We find that temperature strongly modifies the pleiotropic phenotypic effects of an incompatible interaction between a Drosophila melanogaster polymorphism in the nuclear-encoded, mitochondrial tyrosyl-transfer (t)RNA synthetase and a D. simulans polymorphism in the mitochondrially encoded tRNATyr. The incompatible mitochondrial–nuclear genotype extends development time, decreases larval survivorship, and reduces pupation height, indicative of decreased energetic performance. These deleterious effects are ameliorated when larvae develop at 16° and exacerbated at warmer temperatures, leading to complete sterility in both sexes at 28°. The incompatible genotype has a normal metabolic rate at 16° but a significantly elevated rate at 25°, consistent with the hypothesis that inefficient energy metabolism extends development in this genotype at warmer temperatures. Furthermore, the incompatibility decreases metabolic plasticity of larvae developed at 16°, indicating that cooler development temperatures do not completely mitigate the deleterious effects of this genetic interaction. Our results suggest that the epistatic fitness effects of metabolic mutations may generally be conditional on the thermal environment. The expression of epistatic interactions in some environments, but not others, weakens the efficacy of selection in removing deleterious epistatic variants from populations and may promote the accumulation of incompatibilities whose fitness effects will depend upon the environment in which hybrids occur.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic determinants of coral heat tolerance across latitudes

TL;DR: An up–to–10-fold increase in odds of survival of coral larvae under heat stress when their parents come from a warmer lower-latitude location is shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

The on‐again, off‐again relationship between mitochondrial genomes and species boundaries

TL;DR: Recent advances related to mitochondrial introgression and mitonuclear incompatibilities are reviewed, including the potential for cointrogression of mtDNA and interacting nuclear genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Positive and purifying selection in mitochondrial genomes of a bird with mitonuclear discordance.

TL;DR: Signs of positive, divergent selection on mitochondrial genes in E. australis are found and it is discussed whether this selection may reflect local environmental adaptation, a by‐product of other selective processes, or genetic incompatibilities, and how these hypotheses can be tested in future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing the fitness consequences of mitonuclear interactions in natural populations.

TL;DR: The modes by which mitochondrial and nuclear genomes may coevolve within natural populations are outlined, and the implications of mitonuclear coadaptation for diverse fields of study in the biological sciences are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental support that natural selection has shaped the latitudinal distribution of mitochondrial haplotypes in Australian Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: The ability of flies to tolerate extreme thermal challenges is affected by sequence variation across mtDNA haplotypes, and that the thermal performance associated with each haplotype corresponds with its latitudinal prevalence, suggesting that standing variation in the mitochondrial genome can be shaped by thermal selection, and could therefore contribute to evolutionary adaptation under climatic stress.
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