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Natural hybridization reveals incompatible alleles that cause melanoma in swordtail fish

Authors :
Kang Du
Shreya M. Banerjee
Molly Schumer
Alejandra P. Díaz-Loyo
David Reich
Patrick Reilly
Mateo García-Olazábal
Manfred Schartl
Daniel L. Powell
Danielle M. Blakkan
Peter Andolfatto
Gil G. Rosenthal
Mackenzie Keegan
Source :
Science
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Mapping vertebrate incompatibility alleles Deleterious gene interactions may underlie the observed hybrid incompatibilities. However, few genes underlying hybrid incompatibilities have been identified, and most of these involve species that do not hybridize in natural conditions. Powell et al. used genome sequencing to map genes likely responsible for incompatibilities that reduce fitness in naturally occurring hybrid swordtail fish. These gene combinations result in malignant melanoma, which is found in naturally hybridizing populations but is not present in the parental populations (see the Perspective by Dagilis and Matute). Using genome and population resequencing, the authors performed a genome-wide association study to identify potentially causative mutations. Using an admixture mapping approach that assessed introgression between multiple swordtail fish species, the authors suggest that lineages carry different genes that interact with the same candidate gene, resulting in the observed melanomas and providing insight into convergent hybrid incompatibles that arise between species. Science , this issue p. 731 ; see also p. 710

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ae5d81b549622115ba53f301c7cd1de