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Early evolution of reproductive isolation: A case of weak inbreeder/strong outbreeder leads to an intraspecific hybridization barrier in Arabidopsis lyrata
Author(s) -
İltaş Ömer,
Svitok Marek,
Cornille Amandine,
Schmickl Roswitha,
Lafon Placette Clément
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/evo.14240
Subject(s) - biology , selfing , reproductive isolation , outcrossing , endosperm , mating , evolutionary biology , mating system , genetics , ecology , population , pollen , demography , sociology
Abstract Reproductive strategies play a major role in plant speciation. Notably, transitions from outcrossing to selfing may lead to relaxed sexual selection and parental conflict. Shifts in mating systems can affect maternal and paternal interests, and thus parent–specific influence on endosperm development, leading to reproductive isolation: if selfing and outcrossing species hybridize, the resulting seeds may not be viable due to endosperm failure. Nevertheless, it remains unclear how the switch in mating systems can impact reproductive isolation between recently diverged lineages, that is, during the process of speciation. We investigated this question using Arabidopsis lyrata , which recently transitioned to selfing (10,000 years ago) in certain North American populations, where European populations remain outcrossing. We performed reciprocal crosses between selfers and outcrossers, and measured seed viability and endosperm development. We show that parental genomes in the hybrid seed negatively interact, as predicted by parental conflict. This leads to extensive hybrid seed lethality associated with endosperm cellularization disturbance. Our results suggest that this is primarily driven by divergent evolution of the paternal genome between selfers and outcrossers. In addition, we observed other hybrid seed defects, suggesting that sex‐specific interests are not the only processes contributing to postzygotic reproductive isolation.