Testing for the genomic footprint of conflict between life stages in an angiosperm and a moss species
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The maintenance of genetic variation by balancing selection is of considerable interest to evolutionary biologists. An important but understudied potential driver of balancing selection is antagonistic pleiotropy between diploid and haploid stages of the plant life cycle. Despite sharing a common genome, sporophytes (2n) and gametophytes (n) may undergo differential or even opposing selection. Theoretical work suggests the antagonistic pleiotropy between life stages can generate balancing selection and maintain genetic variation. Despite the potential for far-reaching consequences of gametophytic selection, empirical tests of its pleiotropic effects (neutral, synergistic, or antagonistic) on sporophytes are generally lacking. Here, we examined the population genomic signals of selection across life stages in the angiosperm Rumex hastatulus and the moss Ceratodon purpureus . We compared gene expression among life stages and between sexes, combined with neutral diversity statistics and the analysis of the distribution of fitness effects. In contrast to what would be predicted under balancing selection due to antagonistic pleiotropy, we found that unbiased genes between life stages are under stronger purifying selection, likely explained by a predominance of synergistic pleiotropy between life stages and strong purifying selection on broadly expressed genes. In addition, we found that 30% of candidate genes under balancing selection in R. hastatulus are located within inversion polymorphisms. Our findings provide novel insights into the genome-wide characteristics and consequences of plant gametophytic selection.
Significance
The genome-wide importance of balancing selection has been a key question in evolutionary biology. Despite theoretical support for the potential of balancing selection generated by antagonistic pleiotropy between plant life stages, no empirical studies have investigated this problem. Our results revealed genome-wide patterns more consistent with synergistic pleiotropy, with gametophyte-biased genes mostly likely to be under relaxed purifying selection in both angiosperm and moss species we investigated. In addition, our study suggests gene expression level and breadth has a greater effect on selection efficacy than differences between ploidy levels in different life stages.