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1.
M. C. Carracedo P. Casares E. San Miguel 《Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata》1989,52(2):159-166
Isofemale lines of D. simulans were examined to determine the age of sexual maturity of males with conspecific females, and for the frequency of hybridization with D. melanogaster females. Males started to mature sexually on the first day after eclosion but their ability to mate slowly increased during the following day. The estimates of both the age sexual maturation started and the switch from immature to mature males were strongly dependent on the female genotypes used in the tests. No clear differences in speed of maturation were apparent between male lines. In contrast, differences in frequency of hybridization with D. melanogaster females did occur. From the above results it is concluded that the differential hybridization success of male D. simulans lines is not related to the speed at which males mature sexually.
Résumé Des lignées isofemelles de D. simulans ont été examinées pour déterminer l'âge de la maturité sexuelle des mâles avec des femelles conspécifiques et pour établir la fréquence de l'hybridation avec des femelles de D. melanogaster. Les mâles ont commencé à être sexuellement mûrs le premier jour après l'émergence, mais leur aptitude à la copulation a augmenté lentement pendant le jour suivant. Les estimations, tant de l'âge du début de la maturation sexuelle que de l'âge du passage de mâle immature à mâle sexuellement mûr dépendaient étroitement des génotypes des femelles utilisées dans les expériences. Il n'y avait pas de différences nettes entre les lignées de mâles. Par contre, des différences dans les fréquences d'hybridation avec les femelles de D. melanogaster ont été observées. De ces résultats, on peut conclure que les différences dans la réussite des hybridations des lignées de mâles de D. simulans n'étaient pas dues à la vitesse de maturation sexuelle des mâles.相似文献
2.
Llopart A Mabillé A Peters-Hall JR Comeron JM Kliman RM 《Journal of molecular evolution》2008,66(3):224-231
In many organisms, synonymous codon usage is biased by a history of natural selection. However, codon bias, itself, does not
indicate that selection is ongoing; it may be a vestige of past selection. Simple statistical tests have been devised to infer
ongoing selection on codon usage by comparing the derived state frequency spectra at polymorphic sites segregating either
derived preferred codons or derived unpreferred codons; if selection is effective, the frequency of derived states should
be higher in the former. We propose a new test that uses the inferred degree of preference, essentially calculating the correlation
of derived state frequency and the difference in preference between the derived and the ancestral states; the correlation
should be positive if selection is effective. When implementing the test, derived and ancestral states can be assigned by
parsimony or on the basis of relative probability. In either case, statistical significance is estimated by a simple permutation
test. We explored the statistical power of the test by sampling polymorphism data from 14 loci in 16 strains of D. simulans, finding that the test retains 80% power even when quite a few of the data are discarded. The power of the test likely reflects
better use of multiple features of the data, combining population frequencies of polymorphic variants and quantitative estimates
of codon preferences. We also applied this novel test to 14 newly sequenced loci in five strains of D. mauritiana, showing for the first time ongoing selection on codon usage in this species. 相似文献
3.
Hirokazu Yamada Masatoshi Tomaru Muneo Matsuda Yuzuru Oguma 《Journal of Insect Behavior》2008,21(4):222-239
Drosophila ananassae and D. pallidosa are closely related, sympatric species that lack postmating isolation. Sexual isolation has been considered important in
maintaining them as independent species. To clarify the behavioral processes leading to sexual isolation, we analyzed behavioral
sequences and examined the effect of courtship song on mating success and on behaviors of both sexes by surgically removing
male wings (song generators), female aristae (song receivers), or female wings (means of fluttering). We found that heterospecific
courtship songs evoked female wing fluttering, whereas conspecific courtship song did not. Furthermore, female wing fluttering
made courting males discontinue courtship. These findings suggest that strong sexual isolation is achieved through the following
behavioral sequence: heterospecific song→female wing fluttering→courtship discontinuation. 相似文献
4.
A recent study suggested that recent nuclear gene introgression between Drosophila simulans and D. mauritiana may have obscured efforts to estimate the phylogeny of the species of the D. simulans clade, which includes these two species and D. sechellia. Here, we report sequence variation of an intron of the eyeless gene in this species group. This gene should introgress freely between these species because it is not linked to any known barriers to gene exchange. We have also reevaluated levels of sequence divergence among species in this clade, noting differences between loci in regions of low recombination (as in all chromosome 4 loci) relative to other loci. Overall, none of the data analyzed were consistent with recent introgression exclusively between D. simulans and D. mauritiana. 相似文献
5.
We have analysed the viability of cellular clones induced by mitotic recombination in Drosophila melanogaster/D. simulans hybrid females during larval growth. These clones contain a portion of either melanogaster or simulans genomes in homozygosity. Analysis has been carried out for the X and the second chromosomes, as well as for the 3L chromosome arm. Clones were not found in certain structures, and in others they appeared in a very low frequency. Only in abdominal tergites was a significant number of clones observed, although their frequency was lower than in melanogaster abdomens. The bigger the portion of the genome that is homozygous, the less viable is the recombinant melano-gaster/simulans hybrid clone. The few clones that appeared may represent cases in which mitotic recombination took place in distal chromosome intervals, so that the clones contained a small portion of either melanogaster or simulans chromosomes in homozygosity. Moreover, Lhr, a gene of D. simulans that suppresses the lethality of male and female melanogaster/simulans hybrids, does not suppress the lethality of the recombinant melanogaster/simulans clones. Thus, it appears that there is not just a single gene, but at least one per tested chromosome arm (and maybe more) that cause hybrid lethality. Therefore, the two species, D. melanogaster and D. simulans, have diverged to such a degree that the absence of part of the genome of one species cannot be substituted by the corresponding part of the genome of the other, probably due to the formation of co-adapted gene complexes in both species following their divergent evolution after speciation. The disruption of those coadapted gene complexes would cause the lethality of the recombinant hybrid clones. 相似文献
6.
James T. Nishiura 《Biochemical genetics》1981,19(1-2):15-30
In preparation for the isolation and biochemical characterization of putative RNA polymerase mutants, DNA-dependent RNA polymerases of Drosophila melanogaster adults were isolated and partially characterized. Approximately 70% of the female adult RNA polymerase is located in ovaries. Multiple forms of ovarian RNA polymerases I and II are separable by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography. The two forms of RNA polymerase II differ in ammonium sulfate optima. RNA polymerase IIA is more active with double-stranded DNA as template, whereas RNA polymerase IIB transcribes single-stranded DNA most efficiently. Rechromatography of RNA polymerase IIA on DEAE-Sephadex results in the loss of ability of this form to transcribed double-stranded DNA most efficiently. Ovariectomized carcasses have two forms of RNA polymerase I and one form of RNA polymerase II and each transcribes single-stranded DNA most efficiently. As judged by gel filtration chromatography, female adult extracts have forms of RNA polymerase II that differ in molecular weight and template preference.Supported by Grants GM23456 from the NIH and 11259 from the City University Research Foundation. 相似文献
7.
Theories for the evolution of aging rest on the assumption that at least some deleterious mutations have effects that are
limited to certain ages. Many mutation accumulation studies have tried to measure the number and magnitude of deleterious
mutations, but few studies have tried to determine the extent to which the effects of mutations are limited to particular
ages. Here we estimate the age-specific effect of deleterious mutations on mortality rate in an outbred population of the
fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. We used the ‘middle class neighborhood’ approach to accumulation mutations in populations of flies that had recently been
obtained from the wild. There are mutations that increase mortality rates, but whose effects are limited to specific ages.
The age-specificity of mutational effects differs between the sexes, between virgin and mated flies, and over time. After
10 and 20 generations of mutation accumulation, there were clear age-specific effects of mutations. After 30 generations,
however, the degree of age-specificity decreased. In addition, mutation accumulation led to a steady increase in larval mortality
and a small but significant increase in the sex ratio of eclosing flies. We discuss the implications of these results for
models of aging, and suggest approaches that future studies should take to obtain accurate information on the age-specificity
of novel mutations.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. 相似文献
8.
A genomic comparison of Drosophila melanogaster and Drosophila pseudoobscura provides a unique opportunity to investigate factors involved in sequence divergence. The chromosomal arrangements of these
species include an autosomal segment in D. melanogaster which is homologous to part of the X chromosome in D. pseudoobscura. Using orthologues to calculate rates of nonsynonymous (dN) substitutions, we found genes on the X chromosome to be significantly more diverged than those on the autosomes, but it
is not true for segment 3L-XR which is autosomal in D. melanogaster (3L) and X-linked in D. pseudoobscura (XR). We also found that the median dN values for genes having reproductive functions in either the male, the female, or both sexes are higher than those for sequences
without reproductive function and even higher for sequences involved in male-specific function. These estimates of divergence
for male sex-related sequences are most likely underestimates, as the very rapidly evolving reproductive genes would tend
to lose homology sooner and thus not be included in the comparison of orthologues. We also noticed a high proportion of male
reproductive genes among the othologous genes with the highest rates of dN. Reproductive genes with and without an orthologue in D. pseudoobscura were compared among D. melanogaster, D. simulans, and D. yakuba and it was found that there were in fact higher rates of divergence in the group without a D. pseudoobscura orthologue. These results, from widely separated taxa, bolster the thesis that sexual system genes experience accelerated
rates of change in comparison to nonsexual genes in evolution and speciation.
[Reviewing Editor: Dr. Willie J. Swanson] 相似文献
9.
Four species of the Drosophila virilis group, D. montana, D. littoralis, D. lummei, and D. ezoana, occur sympatrically in several locations in northern Europe. Courtship interactions between the flies of the three first-mentioned species were observed at malt baits in Kemi, northern Finland, to find out how the flies of different species recognize conspecific individuals and how interspecific courtships differ from intraspecific ones in the wild. Intraspecific courtships (including females of different reproductive stages) and interspecific courtships were also videotaped and analyzed in laboratory. In the wild the males courted both conspecific and allospecific females, even though the species varied in how much the males were attracted to females of different species. Interspecific courtships usually broke off when the male touched the female or when the male and/or the female vibrated his/her wings, producing acoustic cues. In the laboratory males courted conspecific females irrespective of the reproductive stage of the female, even though the courtships directed toward immature and fertilized females usually included only orienting and touching (no licking and singing). D. littoralis, and very rarely D. montana and D. lummei, males courted also allospecific females. In the few interspecific courtships between these three species, where the male proceeded to singing, females responded to male singing by vibrating their wings. This ended the courtship. It is suggested that both the chemical cues affecting female attractivity and the acoustic signals of males and females, which are produced by wing vibration, function in maintaining sexual isolation between these three species. 相似文献
10.
Comparison of synonymous and nonsynonymous variation/substitution within and between species at individual genes has become a widely used general approach to detect the effect of selection versus drift. The sibling species group comprised of two cosmopolitan (Drosophila melanogaster and Drosophila simulans) and two island (Drosophila mauritiana and Drosophila sechellia) species has become a model system for such studies. In the present study we reanalyzed the pattern of protein variation in these species, and the results were compared against the patterns of nucleotide variation obtained from the literature, mostly available for melanogaster and simulans. We have mainly focused on the contrasting patterns of variation between the cosmopolitan pair. The results can be summarized as follows: (1) As expected the island species D. mauritiana and D. sechellia showed much less variation than the cosmopolitan species D. melanogaster and D. simulans. (2) The chromosome 2 showed significantly less variation than chromosome 3 and X in all four species which may indicate effects of past selective sweeps. (3) In contrast to its overall low variation, D. mauritiana showed highest variation for X-linked loci which may indicate introgression from its sibling, D. simulans. (4) An average population of D. simulans was as heterozygous as that of D. melanogaster (14.4% v.s. 13.9%) but the difference was large and significant when considering only polymorphic loci (37.2% v.s. 26.1%). (5) The species-wise pooled populations of these two species showed similar results (all loci = 18.3% v.s. 20.0%, polymorphic loci = 47.2% v.s. 37.6%). (6) An average population of D. simulans had more low-frequency alleles than D. melanogaster, and the D. simulans alleles were found widely distributed in all populations whereas the D. melanogaster alleles were limited to local populations. As a results of this, pooled populations of D. melanogaster showed more polymorphic loci than those of D. simulans (48.0% v.s. 32.0%) but the difference was reduced when the comparison was made on the basis of an average population (29.1% v.s. 21.4%). (7) While the allele frequency distributions within populations were nonsignificant in both D. melanogaster and D. simulans, melanogaster had fewer than simulans, but more than expected from the neutral theory, low frequency alleles. (8) Diallelic loci with the second allele with a frequency less than 20% had similar frequencies in all four species but those with the second allele with a frequency higher than 20% were limited to only melanogaster the latter group of loci have clinal (latitudinal) patterns of variation indicative of balancing selection. (9) The comparison of D. simulans/D. melanogaster protein variation gave a ratio of 1.04 for all loci and 1.42 for polymorphic loci, against a ratio of approximately 2-fold difference for silent nucleotide sites. This suggests that the species ratios of protein and silent nucleotide polymorphism are too close to call for selective difference between silent and allozyme variation in D. simulans. In conclusion, the contrasting levels of allozyme polymorphism, distribution of rare alleles, number of diallelic loci and the patterns of geographic differentiation between the two species suggest the role of natural selection in D. melanogaster, and of possibly ancient population structure and recent worldwide migration in D. simulans. Population size differences alone are insufficient as an explanation for the patterns of variation between these two species. 相似文献
11.
The aim of this work is to analyze the homogamy previously detected between two natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster from Brazzaville. It is shown that mating isolation was still maintained under laboratory conditions 10 years after the populations samples were trapped. Isolation seemed to be due mainly to pre-mating isolation and we checked for any suggestion of post-mating mortality of hybrids. Pre-mating isolation was not symmetrical, and significant 2 values were found in 3/4 possible 3-way mating choice experiments. The only exception involved a male from the countryside and two females (one from each population) for which no significant mating preference was detected. Mortality of hybrids was intermediate between those of the parental strains showing a clear maternal effect and the existence of partial dominance. Major differences in the cuticular hydrocarbons were also found and they could account for the isolation. These findings in populations from African breweries indicate that they are closely related to European ones, suggesting that this phenomenon is not a case of sympatric speciation, but probably attributable to the reintroduction of an allopatric population. 相似文献
12.
Evolutionary theories of senescence assume that mutations with age-specific effects exist, yet until now, there has been little
experimental evidence to support this assumption. In this study, we allowed mutations to accumulate in an outbred, wild population
of Drosophila melanogaster to test for age-specific differences in both male mating ability and fecundity. We assayed for age-specific effects of mutations
after 10, 20, and 30 generations of mutation accumulation. For mating ability, we found the strongest effects of mutations
in the first half of the life span after 20 generations, and at nearly all ages by generation 30. These results are qualitatively
consistent with results from a companion study in which age-specific mortality was assayed on the same lines of D. melanogaster. By contrast, effects of fecundity were confined to late ages after 20 generations of mutation accumulation, but by generation
30, as with male mating ability, effects of novel mutations were distributed across all age classes. We discuss several possible
explanations for the differences that we observe between generations within traits, and among traits, and the relevance for
these patterns to models of aging as well as models of mate choice and sexual selection.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. 相似文献
13.
Variation of five quantitative traits (thorax length, wing length, sternopleural bristle number, developmental time and larva-to-adult
viability) was studied in Drosophila melanogaster reared at standard (25°C) and high stressful (32°C) temperatures using half-sib analysis. In all traits, both phenotypic
and environmental variances increased at 32°C. For genetic variances, only two statistically significant differences between
temperature treatments were found: the among-sire variance of viability and the among-dam variance of developmental time were
higher under stress. Among-sire genetic variances and evolvabilities were generally higher at 32°C but narrow sense heritabilities
were not. The results of the present work considered in the context of other studies in D. melanogaster indicate different patterns of genetic variation between stressful and nonstressful environments for the traits examined.
Data on thorax length and viability agree with the hypothesis that genetic variance can be increased under extreme environmental
conditions.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. 相似文献
14.
Sexual isolation has been considered one of the primary causes of speciation and its genetic study has the potential to reveal the genetics of speciation. In Drosophila, the importance of courtship songs in sexual isolation between closely related species has been well investigated, but studies analysing the genetic basis of the difference in the courtship songs associated with sexual isolation are less well documented. Drosophila ananassae and Drosophila pallidosa are useful for studies of sexual isolation, because of their sympatric distribution and absence of postmating isolation. Courtship songs are known to play a crucial role in sexual isolation between these two species, and the female discrimination behaviour against the courting male has been revealed to be controlled by a very narrow region on the second chromosome. In this study we investigated the genetic basis controlling the song differences associated with their sexual isolation, using intact and wingless males with chromosomes substituted between species. The results obtained from F1 hybrid males between these species indicate the dominance of the song characters favoured by D. pallidosa females. In addition, the results obtained from backcross F2 males indicate that chromosome 2 had a major effect on the control of the song characters associated with sexual isolation. 相似文献
15.
Lethal phases of the hybrids betweenDrosophila melanogaster and its sibling species,D. simulans are classified into three types: (1) embryonic lethality in hybrids carryingD. simulans cytoplasm andD. melanogaster X chromosome, (2) larval lethality in hybrids not carryingD. simulans X, and (3) temperature-sensitive pupal lethality in hybrids carryingD. simulans X. The same lethal phases are also observed when either of the two other sibling species,D. mauritiana orD. sechellia, is employed for hybridization withD. melanogaster. Here, we describe genetic analyses of each hybrid lethality, and demonstrate that these three types of lethality are independent
phenomena. We then propose two models to interpret the mechanisms of each hybrid lethality. The first model is a modification
of the conventional X/autosome imbalance hypothesis assuming a lethal gene and a suppressor gene are involved in the larval
lethality, while the second model is for embryonic lethality assuming an interaction between a maternal-effect lethal gene
and a suppressor gene. 相似文献
16.
Coyne JA Kim SY Chang AS Lachaise D Elwyn S 《Evolution; international journal of organic evolution》2002,56(12):2424-2434
Abstract.— .Drosophila yakuba is widespread in Africa, whereas D. santomea, its newly discovered sister species, is endemic to the volcanic island of São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea. Drosophila santomea probably formed after colonization of the island by a D. yakuba‐like ancestor. The species presently have overlapping ranges on the mountain Pico do São Tome, with some hybridization occurring in this region. Sexual isolation between the species is uniformly high regardless of the source of the populations, and, as in many pairs of Drosophila species, is asymmetrical, so that hybridizations occur much more readily in one direction than the other. Despite the fact that these species meet many of the conditions required for the evolution of reinforcement (the elevation of sexual isolation by natural selection to avoid maladaptive interspecific hybridization), there is no evidence that sexual isolation between the species is highest in the zone of overlap. Sexual isolation is due to evolutionary changes in both female preference for heterospecific males and in the vigor with which males court heterospecific females. Heterospecific matings are also slower to take place than are homospecific matings, constituting another possible form of reproductive isolation. Genetic studies show that, when tested with females of either species, male hybrids having a D. santomea X chromosome mate much less frequently with females of either species than do males having a D. yakuba X chromosome, suggesting that the interaction between the D. santomea X chromosome and the D. yakuba genome causes behavioral sterility. Hybrid F1 females mate readily with males of either species, so that sexual isolation in this sex is completely recessive, a phenomenon seen in other Drosophila species. There has also been significant evolutionary change in the duration of copulation between these species; this difference involves genetic changes in both sexes, with at least two genes responsible in males and at least one in females. 相似文献
17.
Anneli Hoikkala Stella Crossley Claudia Castillo-Melendez 《Journal of Insect Behavior》2000,13(3):361-373
Two endemic Australian Drosophila species, D. birchii and D. serrata, have a copulatory courtship, i.e., the males court the female mainly during copulation. In the present study we found the males of both species to mount their prospective mating partners selectively, exhibiting both sex and species recognition. The males began to sing after mounting the female, and they often exhibited also postcopulatory displays typical to copulatory courtship. D. birchii and D. serrata females discriminated against males which did not sing during mounting/copulation, which suggests that the females utilize cryptic female choice. Our findings raise the question of how widespread a phenomenon cryptic female choice is in Drosophila species. 相似文献
18.
19.
Jan S. Ryerse 《Cell and tissue research》1989,256(1):7-16
Summary A procedure has been developed to isolate gap junction-enriched subcellular fractions from Drosophila. Crude membranes from larval homogenates were extracted with 1% N-lauroyl sarcosine in 6 M urea and the gap junctions were collected by centrifugation. The major proteins were separated by SDS PAGE and purified by electro-elution. Electron microscopy revealed structurally pleiomorphic gap junctions in the fractions which included (1) conventional, 16–18 nm-wide septalaminar, (2) collapsed, 13–15 nm-wide pentalaminar, (3) split, and (4) aggregated forms. The fractions contained five major proteins with apparent molecular weights of 18, 26, 36, 52 and 54 kD. Evidence based on (1) the degradation and aggregation behavior of the major proteins following electro-elution and reelectrophoresis, (2) immunological cross-reactivities by affinity-purified antibodies against the major proteins on immunoblots, and (3) immunofluorescent staining of presumptive gap junctions in Drosophila imaginal discs at the light-microscopic level and immunogold staining of purified gap junctions at the electron-microscopic level suggests that the major proteins are interrelated and of gap-junction origin. 相似文献
20.
A. J. Howells 《Biochemical genetics》1979,17(1-2):149-158
Six new EMS-induced scarlet mutants were selected. Four of these were partially pigmented, with xanthommatin levels ranging from 12% to 45% of normal. In one (st
754ts), pigment production was temperature sensitive; the level of xanthommatin changed from less than 10% of normal at 29 C to more than 70% at 18 C. In all of the new mutants tested, the level of early pupal 3-hydroxykynurenine was as low as low as that in st
1. Thus reduced larval accumulation of this metabolite also appears to be a characteristic feature of scarlet mutants. Temperature-pulse and temperature-shift experiments were carried out with st
754ts to determine the temperature-sensitive period for the scarlet gene during development. The major sensitive period commenced prior to the onset of pigmentation and was over before adult emergence. Thus the initiation of xanthommatin synthesis is not brought about by the activation of the scarlet gene. In similar experiments carried out with a temperature-sensitive white mutant (w
bl), a similar temperature-sensitive period was obtained.This work was supported by Grant D2 75/15248 from the Australian Research Grants Committee and also by Grant GB 27599 from The National Science Foundation to Professor M. M. Green. 相似文献