In asexual animals, female meiosis is modified to produce diploid oocytes. If meiosis still involves recombination, this is expected to lead to a rapid loss of heterozygosity, with adverse effects on fitness. Many asexuals, however, have a heterozygous genome, the underlying mechanisms being most often unknown. Cytological and population genomic analyses in the nematode Mesorhabditis belari revealed another case of recombining asexual being highly heterozygous genome-wide. We demonstrated that heterozygosity is maintained despite recombination because the recombinant chromatids of each chromosome pair cosegregate during the unique meiotic division. A theoretical model confirmed that this segregation bias is necessary to account for the observed pattern and likely to evolve under a wide range of conditions. Our study uncovers an unexpected type of non-Mendelian genetic inheritance involving cosegregation of recombinant chromatids.
CITATION STYLE
Blanc, C., Saclier, N., Le Faou, E., Marie-Orleach, L., Wenger, E., Diblasi, C., … Delattre, M. (2023). Cosegregation of recombinant chromatids maintains genome-wide heterozygosity in an asexual nematode. Science Advances, 9(34). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adi2804
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