BMC Evolutionary Biology (Oct 2008)

Genetic conflict outweighs heterogametic incompatibility in the mouse hybrid zone?

  • Dufková Petra,
  • Munclinger Pavel,
  • Baird Stuart JE,
  • Macholán Miloš,
  • Bímová Barbora,
  • Piálek Jaroslav

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-8-271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 271

Abstract

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Abstract Background The Mus musculus musculus/M. m. domesticus contact zone in Europe is characterised by sharp frequency discontinuities for sex chromosome markers at the centre of wider clines in allozyme frequencies. Results We identify a triangular area (approximately 330 km2) where the musculus Y chromosome introgresses across this front for up to 22 km into domesticus territory. Introgression of the Y chromosome is accompanied by a perturbation of the census sex ratio: the sex ratio is significantly female biased in musculus localities and domesticus localities lacking Y chromosome introgression. In contrast, where the musculus Y is detected in domesticus localities, the sex ratio is close to parity, and significantly different from both classes of female biased localities. The geographic position of an abrupt cline in an X chromosome marker, and autosomal clines centred on the same position, seem unaffected by the musculus Y introgression. Conclusion We conclude that sex ratio distortion is playing a role in the geographic separation of speciation genes in this section of the mouse hybrid zone. We suggest that clines for genes involved in sex-ratio distortion have escaped from the centre of the mouse hybrid zone, causing a decay in the barrier to gene flow between the two house mouse taxa.