Dominance reversals: the resolution of genetic conflict and maintenance of genetic variation

Author:

Grieshop Karl123ORCID,Ho Eddie K. H.4ORCID,Kasimatis Katja R.25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada M5S 1A1

3. Department of Molecular Biosciences, The Wenner-Gren Institute, Stockholm University, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden

4. Department of Biology, Reed College, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd, Portland, OR 97202, USA

5. Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA

Abstract

Beneficial reversals of dominance reduce the costs of genetic trade-offs and can enable selection to maintain genetic variation for fitness. Beneficial dominance reversals are characterized by the beneficial allele for a given context (e.g. habitat, developmental stage, trait or sex) being dominant in that context but recessive where deleterious. This context dependence at least partially mitigates the fitness consequence of heterozygotes carrying one non-beneficial allele for their context and can result in balancing selection that maintains alternative alleles. Dominance reversals are theoretically plausible and are supported by mounting empirical evidence. Here, we highlight the importance of beneficial dominance reversals as a mechanism for the mitigation of genetic conflict and review the theory and empirical evidence for them. We identify some areas in need of further research and development and outline three methods that could facilitate the identification of antagonistic genetic variation (dominance ordination, allele-specific expression and allele-specific ATAC-Seq (assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with sequencing)). There is ample scope for the development of new empirical methods as well as reanalysis of existing data through the lens of dominance reversals. A greater focus on this topic will expand our understanding of the mechanisms that resolve genetic conflict and whether they maintain genetic variation.

Funder

University of Toronto

Swedish Research Council

National Sciences and Engineering Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

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