Affiliation:
1. Division of Evolutionary Biology, Faculty of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München , Planegg-Martinsried , Germany
2. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin , Dublin , Republic of Ireland
Abstract
Abstract
In haploid species, sexual reproduction by selfing lacks the common benefits from recombination and is indistinguishable from asexual reproduction at the genetic level. Nevertheless, the evolution of self-compatibility, known as homothallism in organisms with mating types, has occurred hundreds of times in fungi. Two main hypotheses have been proposed for the evolution of homothallism. First, that homothallism offers reproductive assurance, which is especially important when species have an obligatory sexual phase in their lifecycle. Second, that homothallism is associated with population-level compatibility, increasing the chance of outbreeding. Here, we test these hypotheses using the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, which is homothallic by mating-type switching, leveraging natural variation for switching efficiency in this species. Combining empirical tests with cellular automaton simulations, we show that homothallism by switching increases mating success of switching genotypes, but does not affect population-level compatibility. Experiments show that outcrossing is actually reduced under homothallism. This reduction in outcrossing is explained by our simulations, which show that due to local mating, gametes that mated through intraclonal selfing are no longer available for outcrossing. Our results suggest that the recurrent evolution of haploid self-compatibility is likely driven by selection for mating assurance, not to increase the potential for outcrossing.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference88 articles.
1. Why sex is good: On fungi and beyond.;Aanen,2007
2. The fission yeast mating-type switching Motto: “One-for-two” and “two-for-one.”;Arcangioli;Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews,2023
3. Self-compatibility and establishment after “long-distance” dispersal;Baker;Evolution,1955
4. Cell type switching by DNA transposition in fission yeast;Beach;Nature,1983
5. The Evolution of Sex Determination