The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation

A mechanism is proposed by which speciation may occur without the need to postulate geographical isolation of the diverging populations. Closely related species that occupy overlapping or adjacent ecological niches often have an almost identical genome but differ by chromosomal rearrangements that r...

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Main Authors: Robert C. Jackson, Hitesh B. Mistry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9073.pdf
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spelling doaj-02b97afbf10349f780579c59bfac78ae2020-11-25T02:10:16ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-05-018e907310.7717/peerj.9073The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciationRobert C. Jackson0Hitesh B. Mistry1Pharmacometrics Ltd., Cambridge, United KingdomDivision of Pharmacy, University of Manchester, Manchester, United KingdomA mechanism is proposed by which speciation may occur without the need to postulate geographical isolation of the diverging populations. Closely related species that occupy overlapping or adjacent ecological niches often have an almost identical genome but differ by chromosomal rearrangements that result in reproductive isolation. The mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint normally functions to prevent gametes with non-identical karyotypes from forming viable zygotes. Unless gametes from two individuals happen to undergo the same chromosomal rearrangement at the same place and time, a most improbable situation, there has been no satisfactory explanation of how such rearrangements can propagate. Consideration of the dynamics of the spindle assembly checkpoint suggest that chromosomal fission or fusion events may occur that allow formation of viable heterozygotes between the rearranged and parental karyotypes, albeit with decreased fertility. Evolutionary dynamics calculations suggest that if the resulting heterozygous organisms have a selective advantage in an adjoining or overlapping ecological niche from that of the parental strain, despite the reproductive disadvantage of the population carrying the altered karyotype, it may accumulate sufficiently that homozygotes begin to emerge. At this point the reproductive disadvantage of the rearranged karyotype disappears, and a single population has been replaced by two populations that are partially reproductively isolated. This definition of species as populations that differ from other, closely related, species by karyotypic changes is consistent with the classical definition of a species as a population that is capable of interbreeding to produce fertile progeny. Even modest degrees of reproductive impairment of heterozygotes between two related populations may lead to speciation by this mechanism, and geographical isolation is not necessary for the process.https://peerj.com/articles/9073.pdfSpeciationSpindle assembly checkpointMathematical modelEvolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert C. Jackson
Hitesh B. Mistry
spellingShingle Robert C. Jackson
Hitesh B. Mistry
The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
PeerJ
Speciation
Spindle assembly checkpoint
Mathematical model
Evolution
author_facet Robert C. Jackson
Hitesh B. Mistry
author_sort Robert C. Jackson
title The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
title_short The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
title_full The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
title_fullStr The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
title_full_unstemmed The spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
title_sort spindle assembly checkpoint and speciation
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-05-01
description A mechanism is proposed by which speciation may occur without the need to postulate geographical isolation of the diverging populations. Closely related species that occupy overlapping or adjacent ecological niches often have an almost identical genome but differ by chromosomal rearrangements that result in reproductive isolation. The mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint normally functions to prevent gametes with non-identical karyotypes from forming viable zygotes. Unless gametes from two individuals happen to undergo the same chromosomal rearrangement at the same place and time, a most improbable situation, there has been no satisfactory explanation of how such rearrangements can propagate. Consideration of the dynamics of the spindle assembly checkpoint suggest that chromosomal fission or fusion events may occur that allow formation of viable heterozygotes between the rearranged and parental karyotypes, albeit with decreased fertility. Evolutionary dynamics calculations suggest that if the resulting heterozygous organisms have a selective advantage in an adjoining or overlapping ecological niche from that of the parental strain, despite the reproductive disadvantage of the population carrying the altered karyotype, it may accumulate sufficiently that homozygotes begin to emerge. At this point the reproductive disadvantage of the rearranged karyotype disappears, and a single population has been replaced by two populations that are partially reproductively isolated. This definition of species as populations that differ from other, closely related, species by karyotypic changes is consistent with the classical definition of a species as a population that is capable of interbreeding to produce fertile progeny. Even modest degrees of reproductive impairment of heterozygotes between two related populations may lead to speciation by this mechanism, and geographical isolation is not necessary for the process.
topic Speciation
Spindle assembly checkpoint
Mathematical model
Evolution
url https://peerj.com/articles/9073.pdf
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