生物
转录组
精子竞争
基因
精子
性别选择
动物
繁殖
进化生物学
遗传学
基因表达
男科
医学
作者
Bernadette D. Johnson,Andrew P Anderson,Clayton M. Small,Emily Rose,Sarah P. Flanagan,Corey Hendrickson‐Rose,Adam G. Jones
出处
期刊:Evolution
[Wiley]
日期:2022-08-01
卷期号:76 (9): 2162-2180
摘要
In many animals, sperm competition and sexual conflict are thought to drive the rapid evolution of male-specific genes, especially those expressed in the testes. A potential exception occurs in the male-pregnant pipefishes, where females transfer eggs to the males, eliminating testes from participating in these processes. Here, we show that testis-related genes differ dramatically in their rates of molecular evolution and expression patterns in pipefishes and seahorses (Syngnathidae) compared to other fish. Genes involved in testis or sperm function within syngnathids experience weaker selection in comparison to their orthologs in spawning and livebearing fishes. An assessment of gene turnover and expression in the testis transcriptome suggests that syngnathids have lost (or significantly reduced expression of) important classes of genes from their testis transcriptomes compared to other fish. Our results indicate that more than 50 million years of male pregnancy has removed syngnathid testes from the molecular arms race that drives the rapid evolution of male reproductive genes in other taxa. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
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