Evolutionary Implications of Mechanistic Models of TE-Mediated Hybrid Incompatibility

  • Castillo D
  • Moyle L
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Abstract

New models of TE repression in plants (specifically Arabidopsis ) have suggested specific mechanisms by which TE misregulation in hybrids might result in the expression of hybrid inviability. If true, these models suggest as yet undescribed consequences for (1) mechanistic connections between hybrid problems expressed at different postzygotic stages (e.g., inviability versus sterility), (2) the predicted strength, stage, and direction of isolation between diverging lineages that differ in TE activity, and (3) the association between species attributes that influence TE dynamics (e.g., mode of reproduction, geographical structure) and the rate at which they could accumulate incompatibilities. In this paper, we explore these implications and outline future empirical directions for generating data necessary to evaluate them.

Figures

  • Figure 1: A general model of the siRNA pathway demonstrating the three processes observed in both plants and animals. (1) Transposon transcripts are detected by complementary small RNAs derived from previously transcribed transposons. (2) These transcripts are post-transcriptionally cleaved by small RNA-protein complexes creating small RNAs that are amplified through an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. (3) These newly derived small RNAs are used to target transposon transcripts as in step (1) or target the transposon sequences in the genome to induce DNA methylation and repressive chromatin modifications.
  • Figure 2: The misregulation of TEs due to a mismatch of maternal siRNA and paternal TE copies, consistent with the Martienssen and Josefsson models of endosperm failure. (a) TE load differences between parents: the maternal siRNA cannot suppress paternal TE copies due to excess of paternal TE copies. (b) TE sequence mismatch between parents: the maternal siRNA cannot suppress paternal TE copies due to differences in sequences of the TEs.

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APA

Castillo, D. M., & Moyle, L. C. (2012). Evolutionary Implications of Mechanistic Models of TE-Mediated Hybrid Incompatibility. International Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2012, 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/698198

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