Selection against Heteroplasmy Explains the Evolution of Uniparental Inheritance of Mitochondria

Title
Selection against Heteroplasmy Explains the Evolution of Uniparental Inheritance of Mitochondria
Publication Date
2015
Author(s)
Christie, Joshua R
Schaerf, Timothy
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6642-8374
Email: tschaerf@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:tschaerf
Beekman, Madeleine
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1005112
UNE publication id
une:18470
Abstract
Why are mitochondria almost always inherited from one parent during sexual reproduction? Current explanations for this evolutionary mystery include conflict avoidance between the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, clearing of deleterious mutations, and optimization of mitochondrial-nuclear coadaptation. Mathematical models, however, fail to show that uniparental inheritance can replace biparental inheritance under any existing hypothesis. Recent empirical evidence indicates that mixing two different but normal mitochondrial haplotypes within a cell (heteroplasmy) can cause cell and organism dysfunction. Using a mathematical model, we test if selection against heteroplasmy can lead to the evolution of uniparental inheritance. When we assume selection against heteroplasmy and mutations are neither advantageous nor deleterious (neutral mutations), uniparental inheritance replaces biparental inheritance for all tested parameter values. When heteroplasmy involves mutations that are advantageous or deleterious (non-neutral mutations), uniparental inheritance can still replace biparental inheritance. We show that uniparental inheritance can evolve with or without pre-existing mating types. Finally, we show that selection against heteroplasmy can explain why some organisms deviate from strict uniparental inheritance. Thus, we suggest that selection against heteroplasmy explains the evolution of uniparental inheritance.
Link
Citation
PLoS Genetics, 11(4), p. 1-30
ISSN
1553-7404
1553-7390
Start page
1
End page
30

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink