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Reproductive Isolation due to Divergent Ecological Selection Is Accompanied by Vast Genomic Instability in Experimentally Evolved Yeast Populations

Title: Reproductive Isolation due to Divergent Ecological Selection Is Accompanied by Vast Genomic Instability in Experimentally Evolved Yeast Populations
Authors: Bendixsen, Devin P.; Gilchrist, Ciaran; Haberkorn, Chloé; Persson, Karl; Geijer, Cecilia; Warringer, Jonas; Stelkens, Rike
Contributors: Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse; Wenner-Gren Stiftelserna; Vetenskapsrådet; Uppsala Multidisciplinary Center for Advanced Computational Science; Science for Life Laboratory
Source: Molecular Ecology ; ISSN 0962-1083 1365-294X
Publisher Information: Wiley
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: Wiley Online Library (Open Access Articles via Crossref)
Description: Populations evolving independently in divergent environments accumulate genetic differences and potentially evolve reproductive isolation as a by‐product of divergence. The speed and mechanisms underlying this process are difficult to investigate because we rarely get the opportunity to witness them in natural settings, and histories of selection and gene flow between populations are often unknown. Here, we experimentally evolved yeast for 1000 generations of evolution in both divergent and parallel environments. At regular time points during experimental evolution, we made crosses between parallel‐ and divergent‐evolving populations to measure postzygotic reproductive isolation (gamete viability). We used whole genome population sequencing to determine the mutational load, the number and types of structural variation, and other genomic features of the parent, F1 and F2 intraspecific hybrids. We found evidence for large‐scale phenotypic and genome‐wide differentiation in response to divergent laboratory selection. Divergent‐selected populations produced hybrids with reduced gamete viability—a classic signature of postzygotic reproductive isolation in the form of hybrid breakdown. Parallel‐selected populations, on the other hand, remained more reproductively compatible (with exceptions). We found that F2 hybrid genomes contained vast genomic instability, that is, new structural variants (especially insertions, deletions and interchromosomal translocations) that were not observed in parent and F1 genomes, which is likely a result of chromosome missegregation and recombination errors in hybrid meiosis. Our results provide phenotypic and genomic evidence that partial reproductive isolation evolved due to adaptation to divergent environments, consistent with predictions of ecological speciation theory.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1111/mec.70110
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.70110; https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/mec.70110
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.284E80F2
Database: BASE