Early-acting inbreeding depression can evolve as an inbreeding avoidance mechanism.

altruism inbreeding depression reproductive compensation self-incompatibility

Journal

Proceedings. Biological sciences
ISSN: 1471-2954
Titre abrégé: Proc Biol Sci
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101245157

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
13 Mar 2024
Historique:
medline: 6 3 2024
pubmed: 6 3 2024
entrez: 6 3 2024
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Despite the potential for mechanical, developmental and/or chemical mechanisms to prevent self-fertilization, incidental self-fertilization is inevitable in many predominantly outcrossing species. In such cases, inbreeding can compromise individual fitness. Unquestionably, much of this inbreeding depression is maladaptive. However, we show that when reproductive compensation allows for the replacement of inviable embryos lost early in development, selection can favour deleterious recessive variants that induce 'self-sacrificial' death of inbred embryos. Our theoretical results provide numerous testable predictions which could challenge the assumption that inbreeding depression is always maladaptive. Our work is applicable any species that cannot fully avoid inbreeding, exhibits substantial inbreeding depression, and has the potential to compensate embryos lost early in development. In addition to its general applicability, our theory suggests that self-sacrificial variants might be responsible for the remarkably low realized selfing rates of gymnosperms with high primary selfing rates, as gymnosperms exhibit strong inbreeding depression, have effective reproductive compensation mechanisms, and cannot evolve chemical self-incompatibility.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38444336
doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.2467
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

20232467

Auteurs

Yaniv Brandvain (Y)

Department of Plant amd Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, St Paul, MN, USA.

Lia Thomson (L)

Department of Plant amd Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, St Paul, MN, USA.
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Temple, AZ, USA.

Tanja Pyhäjärvi (T)

Department of Forest Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.

Classifications MeSH