AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how variations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) impact fitness in different populations and the role of nuclear DNA (nuDNA) in these interactions.
  • The research involved creating experimental lines by backcrossing iso female lines from four populations and testing them under various conditions, focusing on fitness traits such as desiccation resistance and developmental time.
  • Results indicated that sympatric mtDNA variants influence fitness, primarily interacting with nuDNA, and that temperature-specific factors play a more significant role than sex-specific selection in maintaining mtDNA diversity.

Article Abstract

The adaptive significance of sympatric mitochondrial (mtDNA) variation and the role of selective mechanisms that maintain it are debated to this day. Isofemale lines of collected from four populations were backcrossed within populations to construct experimental lines, with all combinations of mtDNA haplotypes and nuclear genetic backgrounds (nuDNA). Individuals of both sexes from these lines were then subjected to four fitness assays (desiccation resistance, developmental time, egg-to-adult viability and sex ratio) on two experimental temperatures to examine the role of temperature fluctuations and sex-specific selection, as well as the part that interactions between the two genomes play in shaping mtDNA variation. The results varied across populations and fitness components. In the majority of comparisons, they show that sympatric mitochondrial variants affect fitness. However, their effect should be examined in light of interactions with nuDNA, as mito-nuclear genotype was even more influential on fitness across all components. We found both sex-specific and temperature-specific differences in mitochondrial and mito-nuclear genotype ranks in all fitness components. The effect of temperature-specific selection was found to be more prominent, especially in desiccation resistance. From the results of different components tested, we can also infer that temperature-specific mito-nuclear interactions rather than sex-specific selection on mito-nuclear genotypes have a more substantial role in preserving mtDNA variation in this model species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8880146PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13020139DOI Listing

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