Title: Vertebrate Clonality: Genetics, Ecology, and Evolution of Sexual Abstinence
1(Oxford Univ. Press, 2008)
2general types of cloning
- artificial (human-mediated) vs. natural
- individual pieces of DNA vs. whole organisms
3artificial cloning of pieces of DNA
in vivo (via rest. enz., since late 1960s)
in vitro (via PCR, since mid-1980s)
4artificial cloning of whole vertebrate animals
As early as 1952, embryologists had cloned
individual frogs-- at least to the tadpole
stage-- using nuclear transfer (NT) from cells of
embryos or tadpoles and in 1975, John Gurdon
cloned frogs using NT from skin cells of adult
frogs
PNAS 38455-463 (1952)
- DEVELOPMENTAL CAPACITY OF NUCLEI TRANSPLANTED
FROM KERATINIZED SKIN CELLS OF ADULT FROGS - J. Embryology Exptl. Morph. 3493-112 (1975)
Leopard Frog (Rana pipiens)
5artificial cloning of mammals
nuclear-transfer (NT) technique
6ca. 20 mammal species have been artificially
cloned by NT
- to date, these include
- mouse
- rat
- goat
- pig
- wolf
- domestic dog
- muflon
- African wildcat
- domestic cat
- water buffalo
- gaur
- rabbit
- horse
- mule
- ferret
- and humans (to blastocyst stage)
7artificial cloning in the context of genetic
engineering
2007
2004
8natural cloning always based on DNA replication
and mitosis
DNA replication
mitosis
9 1) unisexual clonality (parthenogenesis and
related modes) (known in ca. 100
species or distinctive biotypes) 2)
polyembryony (or monozygotic twinning)
(only one vertebrate species does this
constitutively)3) self-fertilization via
hermaphroditism (only one known
vertebrate species does this habitually)
- three forms of whole-animal vertebrate clonality
occur in nature
10parthenogenesis reproduction by the chaste
parthenos means virgin, but ancient Athenians
worshipped the goddess Athena as the mother of
all men
(a sperm-independent and male-independent form of
all-female clonality)
replica of Athena Parthenos (original was
sculpted by Pheidias in 500 B.C., and housed in
the Parthenon)
11constitutive parthenogens cast of players
Darevskia rock lizards (ca. 7 different biotypes
or species)
Aspidoscelis (formerly Cnemidophorus) whiptail
lizards (gt 10)
Kentropyx whiptail lizards (1)
Gymnophthalmus spectacled lizards (1)
12constitutive parthenogens cast of players (cont.)
Lepidodactylus geckos (1)
Nactus geckos (1)
Heteronotia geckos (1)
Hemidactylus geckos (2)
13constitutive parthenogens cast of players (cont.)
Menetia skinks (1)
Leposoma spectacled lizards (1)
Ramphotyphlops blind snakes (1)
Lepidophyma night lizards (1)
14sporadic parthenogens some known examples
Komodo Dragon (Varanus komodoensis)
Bonnethead Shark (Sphyrna tiburo)
15gynogenesis hybridogenesis reproduction by
the semi-chaste
gynogenesis
hybridogenesis
- sperm-dependent forms of clonality
- unisexuals must be sympatric with males of sperm
donor species - males of those related species are sexually
parasitized - under hybridogenesis, males can be genetic
fathers but not grandfathers
16gynogens and hybridogens cast of players
Poecilia mollies (gynogens)
Menidia silversides (gynogens)
Poeciliopsis livebearers (several diploid
hybridogens and triploid gynogens)
Carassius carps
17gynogens and hybridogens cast of players (cont.)
Phoxinus daces (gynogens)
Leuciscus minnows (hybridogens)
Fundulus killifishes (gynogens)
18gynogens and hybridogens cast of players (cont.)
Ambystoma mole salamanders (kleptogens)
Cobitis spined loaches (gynogens mostly)
Rana frogs (hybridogens)
Misgurnus loaches (gynogens)
19 unisexual modes of clonality or hemiclonality
(sperm-independent)
(sperm-dependent)
(also KLEPTOGENESIS)
20geographic ranges and ecological success
Aspidoscelis (whiptail lizards)
Heteronotia binoei (Bynoes Gecko)
Darevskia (rock lizards)
21unisexual clonality background facts
- all known vertebrate unisexual species or
biotypes originated via inter-specific
hybridization - each clonal line is thus highly heterozygous at
nuclear loci - many unisexual biotypes are diploid, but many
others (ca. 60) are polyploid (usually triploid)
22what additional has been learned about unisexual
vertebrates from molecular markers (esp. from
cytonuclear analyses)?
- 1) the parent sexual species, and direction(s) of
original hybrid cross, that produced each
unisexual biotype -
- 2) the cytogenetic mode by which clonal biotypes
arose - 3) the number of clonal strains within each
biotype, their phylogenies, and their
evolutionary ages
23- 1) the parent sexual species, and the
direction(s) of original hybrid cross, that
produced each unisexual strain
In 1978, M.J.D. White lamented in print that for
parthenogenetic species, we are never likely to
know which species was the female parent. But,
in 1979, Brown and Wright used mtDNA to document
the female parent in two Aspidoscelis
(Cnemidophorus) parthenogens. Since then,
cytonuclear appraisals have been employed to
reveal, unambiguously, the male and the female
parent species for many of the worlds known
unisexual biotypes
24the logic of cytonuclear analysis is
straightforward in this context
- nl1 nl2 nl3 nl4 nl5 nl6 mt
- candidate sexual parents
- sp1 A C D B A D A
- sp2 A,B F D,E C A B B
- sp3 A,C D,F A,C D B A,D C
- sp4 B,C A B A,B D B,D D
- sp5 D,E C C A,C E A,D E
- parthenogenetic lineage A/E C/F C/D
C A/E B/D E - so, in this case, the parthenogenetic biotype
clearly arose via a cross - between a female from sp5 and a male from sp2
25 example Amazon Molly, Poecilia formosa (a
gynogenetic species that sexually parasitizes
males of sympatric sexual species, normally
either P. mexicana or P. latipinna)
- molecular markers (mtDNA and allozymes) confirmed
that the Amazon Molly arose recently in evolution
from a hybridization event between a P. mexicana
female and a P. latipinna male.
26unisexual biotype mode male parent
female parentAspidoscelis lizards
uniparens parthenogen burti
inornatus tesselatus
parthenogen septemvittatus marmoratus
velox parthenogen
inornatus burti or costatus
laredoensis parthenogen sexlineatus
gularis Heteronotia
binoei-type lizards parthenogen binoei
sp. CA6 Menidia fish
clarkhubbsi complex gynogen
beryllina peninsulae Phoxinus
fish eos-neogaeus gynogen
eos neogaeus Poeciliopsis fish
monacha-lucida hybridogen
lucida monacha
monacha-occidentalis hybridogen
occidentalis monacha
a few more such representative examples
27invariably, the bisexual parent species have
proved to be somewhat distant congeners (i.e.,
not sister taxa)
example Darevskia lizards
28 more such examples
Aspidoscelis lizards
Poeciliopsis fishes
29why are the clone-yielding hybridization events
between non-sister species?its not because
sister species cant hybridize they often do
hybridize, but the hybrids are sexual rather than
parthenogenetic
- two conventional hypotheses (not mutually
exclusive) - balance hypothesis (Moritz, Vrijenhoek)
- posits that unisexuals arise only when the
genomes of the parental species are divergent
enough to disrupt meiosis in hybrids yet no so
divergent as to seriously compromise hybrid
viability or fertility - phylogenetic constraint hypothesis (Darevsky)
- posits that genetic peculiarities happen to
predispose particular parental species to produce
unisexual lineages when they hybridize
30- 2) the cytogenetic mode by which triploid
clonal strains arose
31two hypothetical routes to triploid unisexuals
1) primary-hybrid route the paired homospecific
nuclear genomes should derive from the sexual
species that provided the male parent in the
original hybrid cross 2) spontaneous-origin
route the paired homospecific nuclear genomes
should derive from the sexual species that
provided the female parent (and mtDNA) in the
original hybrid cross
in empirical cytonuclear appraisals, the
primary-hybrid route proved correct for most if
not all Aspidoscelis lizards examined also true
for triploid Poeciliopsis unisexuals
32- 3) the number of clonal strains, their
phylogenies, and their evolutionary ages - most of this information has come primarily from
analyses of mtDNA (molecular clones within the
organismal clones)
33origin of a unisexual lineage
34example of mtDNA phylogeny (monophyly in this
case)
Aspidoscelis (whiptail lizards)
35another example of mtDNA monophyly for a
unisexual taxon
Ambystoma (mole salamanders)
36examples of mtDNA polyphyly for a unisexual taxon
Heteronotia binoei (Bynoes Gecko)
Menetia greyii (Dwarf Skink)
37estimated evolutionary ages of unisexual
taxa(based on observed mtDNA divergence between
each unisexual lineage and its closest extant
maternal ancestor)
38mtDNA nucleotide diversities in maternal bisexual
species are usually much higher than those in the
unisexual biotypes to which they respectively
gave rise
39 1) unisexual clonality (parthenogenesis and
related modes) (known in ca. 100
species or distinctive biotypes) 2)
polyembryony (or monozygotic twinning)
(only one vertebrate species does this
constitutively)3) self-fertilization via
hermaphroditism (only one known
vertebrate species does this habitually)
- three forms of whole-animal vertebrate clonality
occur in nature
40sporadic polyembryony some reported examples
- cattle
- pigs
- deer
- whales
- various avian species
- some fish species
- and, of course, humans (monozygotic twins)
41constitutivepolyembryony
Dasypus novemcinctus (nine-banded armadillo)
- armadillos (Dasypus) seem to be unique among
vertebrates in this peculiar reproductive
phenomenon. - an intra-generational rather than
inter-generational form of clonality - are littermates truly polyembryonic?
- how might polyembryony have evolved?
42microsatellite confirmation of polyembryony
43Dasypus armadillos
parasitoid wasps
44 1) unisexual clonality (parthenogenesis and
related modes) (known in ca. 100
species or distinctive biotypes) 2)
polyembryony or twinning (only one
vertebrate species does this constitutively)3)
self-fertilization via hermaphroditism
(one known vertebrate species does this
habitually)
- three forms of whole-animal vertebrate clonality
occur in nature
45mangrove killifish the fish that mates with
itself
- Kryptolebias (formerly Rivulus) marmoratus is the
worlds only known vertebrate species that
regularly reproduces as a self-fertilizing
hermaphrodite. - Inside each fishs body is an ovotestis that
simultaneously produces eggs and sperm. These
gametes normally unite inside the fish, who then
lays the self-fertilized eggs or zygotes
externally, where embryonic development proceeds. - Self-fertilization is a highly intense form of
inbreeding. It seems to have produced highly
homozygous lineages of K. marmoratus whose
members are so genetically uniform that they
traditionally have been referred to as belonging
to clones (as gauged, for example, by
acceptance of skin grafts).
46selfing and heterozygosity decay
4727 variable microsatellite loci
Individuals from local Florida sites
4827 variable microsatellite loci
Individuals from local Florida sites
49our genetic findings to date
- K. marmoratus is really an androdioecious species
whose local populations consist of mixtures of
simultaneous hermaphrodites and pure males - selfing predominates, but occasional outcross
events (probably mediated by males) release local
bursts of multi-locus heterozygosity available
for subsequent Mendelian segregation and
reassortment into a wide variety of
recombinant-inbred (and highly homozygous)
strains - local populations thus have a mixed-mating system
(predominant selfing with occasional outcrossing) - this mixed-mating system and its resulting
population-genetic architecture in the Mangrove
Killifish provide a remarkable case of convergent
evolution on the mating systems and population
genetic patterns previously reported in otherwise
very different kinds of organisms - some annual plants (e.g., the slender wild
oat) - some invertebrate animals (e.g., various land
snails)
50heterozygosity issues(and Bakers rule too)
51the end
52given the primary-hybrid route, there are two
further possible hypotheses for triploid
unisexuals
- genome-addition hypothesis
- unreduced ova from the F1 hybrid carried genomes
from both of the parental species - genome-duplication hypothesis
- unreduced ova from the F1 hybrid carried two
copies of a genome from only one of the parental
species
in empirical cytonuclear appraisals, the
genome-addition route proved to be true for
unisexual Poeciliopsis, Poecilia, Menidia, and
Phoxinus
53 Part I. Background Like Begets Like
Chapter 1. Clonality within the Individual
Chapter 2. Sexuality the Antithesis of
ClonalityPart II. Unisexual Clonality in
Nature Chapter 3. Reproduction by the
Chaste Parthenogenesis Chapter 4.
Reproduction by the Semi-chaste Gynogenesis,
Hybridogenesis, and KleptogenesisPart III.
Sexual Clonality in Nature Chapter 5.
Clonality In Utero Polyembryony Chapter 6.
Clonality by Incest Hermaphroditic
Self- fertilizationPart IV. Clonality in the
Laboratory Chapter 7. Human-sponsored
Clonality
(chapter outline)
54a 100,000-year-old hemiclone in Poeciliopsis
- unisexual lineages (black circles in the mtDNA
network) of Poeciliopsis have arisen many times
in evolution. - Indeed, hybridogenetic strains can be lab-
produced by crossing related sexual species. - most of the lineages in nature appear to be
evolutionarily recent or modern - however, based in part on a moderate level of
(post-formational) genetic variation in one
strain that from multiple lines of evidence is
monophyletic, we (Quattro et al.) estimated that
this lineage is approximately 100,000 generations
old.
55the line-curves are the expected heterozygosities
under.
- random mating
-
- random mating
-
- mixed mating
- (with s 0.44
- and
- t 0.56)
56challenges in estimating the number of hybrid
geneses (and evol. ages) for unisexual biotypes
- face-value taxonomy may be misleading, in either
direction (various unisexual taxa might be
oversplit, or overlumped, with respect to the
number of independent evolutionary origins) -
- the difficulty of properly apportioning any
genetic differences observed among extant
unisexuals to independent geneses versus
post-formational mutations - the need to appreciate that a unique genesis for
mtDNA in a unisexual taxon does not necessarily
equate to a single hybrid origin - (imagine, for example, that an Eve had two or
more mates then, the unisexual biotype would be
monophyletic for mtDNA, and yet show considerable
nuclear genome diversity) - the problem of missing data due to extinction
- (for example, the sexual ancestor of a unisexual
biotype may have gone extinct) - the many caveats about molecular clocks
57outcrossing in Belize
Twin Cays, Belize
Charlotte Co., FL.
Shark River, FL.