Title: | Stabilizing selection on behavior and morphology masks positive selection on the signal in a salamander pheromone signaling complex |
Author(s): | Watts RA; Palmer CA; Feldhoff RC; Feldhoff PW; Houck LD; Jones AG; Pfrender ME; Rollmann SM; Arnold SJ; |
Address: | "Department of Zoology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, USA. wattsri@science.oregon.edu" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 0737-4038 (Print) 0737-4038 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Natural selection maintains the integration and coordination of sets of phenotypic characters that collectively perform a task. In functional complexes in which characters span molecular to behavioral levels of organization, we might then expect similar modes of selection to produce similar patterns in evolutionary divergence at each level. To test this expectation, we diagnosed selection at behavioral, morphological, and molecular levels for courtship pheromone signaling by plethodontid salamanders. At the levels of morphology and behavior tens of millions of years of stasis (stabilizing selection) occur on each side of a transition from vaccination to olfactory delivery modes. As a proxy for the molecular level, we used plethodontid receptivity factor (PRF), a protein that is an active component of the pheromone. We cloned PRF from 12 Plethodon spp. spanning the delivery transition and obtained multiple alleles from each individual surveyed. Analyses of 61 alleles for PRF identified elevated nonsynonymous over synonymous substitution rates along lineages in a molecular phylogeny, and at 8% of sites in the protein, indicating that positive (directional) selection has acted on this vertebrate pheromone gene. Structural models showed PRF is in a family of cytokines characterized by a four-alpha-helix bundle. Positive selection in PRF was associated with receptor binding sites that are under purifying selection in other cytokines of that family. The evolutionary dynamics of the plethodontid pheromone delivery complex consists of stabilizing selection on morphological and behavioral aspects of signal delivery but positive selection on the signal mediated by receptors. Thus, different selection modes prevail at different levels in this reproductive functional complex. Evolutionary studies of integrated sets of characters therefore require separate analyses of selective action at each level" |
Keywords: | "Amino Acid Sequence Animals Base Sequence DNA Primers Exocrine Glands/metabolism Likelihood Functions *Models, Molecular Molecular Sequence Data Pheromones/*genetics/metabolism *Phylogeny Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction *Selection, Genetic;" |
Notes: | "MedlineWatts, Richard A Palmer, Catherine A Feldhoff, Richard C Feldhoff, Pamela W Houck, Lynne D Jones, Adam G Pfrender, Michael E Rollmann, Stephanie M Arnold, Stevan J eng Comparative Study Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. 2004/03/12 Mol Biol Evol. 2004 Jun; 21(6):1032-41. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msh093. Epub 2004 Mar 10" |