生物
类胡萝卜素
性别选择
动物
后代
进化生物学
遗传学
植物
怀孕
作者
Małgorzata Anna Gazda,Pedro M. Araújo,Ricardo J. Lopes,Matthew B. Toomey,Pedro Andrade,Sandra Afonso,Cristiana I. Marques,Luís Nunes,Paulo Pereira,Sandra Trigo,Geoffrey E. Hill,Joseph C. Corbo,Miguel Carneiro
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2020-06-11
卷期号:368 (6496): 1270-1274
被引量:85
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.aba0803
摘要
Sexual dichromatism, a difference in coloration between males and females, may be due to sexual selection for ornamentation and mate choice. Here, we show that carotenoid-based dichromatism in mosaic canaries, a hybrid phenotype that arises in offspring of the sexually dichromatic red siskin and monochromatic canaries, is controlled by the gene that encodes the carotenoid-cleaving enzyme β-carotene oxygenase 2 (BCO2). Dichromatism in mosaic canaries is explained by differential carotenoid degradation in the integument, rather than sex-specific variation in physiological functions such as pigment uptake or transport. Transcriptome analyses suggest that carotenoid degradation in the integument might be a common mechanism contributing to sexual dichromatism across finches. These results suggest that differences in ornamental coloration between sexes can evolve through simple molecular mechanisms controlled by genes of major effect.
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