Measurements of hybrid fertility and a test of mate preference for two house mouse races with massive chromosomal divergence

Sofia A. Grize, Elodie Wilwert, Jeremy B. Searle, Anna K. Lindholm*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)
185 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background Western house mice Mus musculus domesticus are among the most important mammalian model species for chromosomal speciation. Hybrids between chromosomal races of M. m. domesticus suffer various degrees of fertility reduction between full fertility and complete sterility, depending on the complexity of the chromosomal differences between the races. This complexity presents itself in hybrids as meiotic configurations of chromosome chains and rings, with longer configurations having a stronger impact on fertility. While hybrids with short configurations have been intensively studied, less work has been done on hybrids with very long configurations. In this study, we investigated laboratory-reared wild mice from two chromosomally very different races in Switzerland found in close proximity. Hybrids between these races form a meiotic chain of fifteen chromosomes. We performed a detailed analysis of male and female hybrid fertility, including three generations of female backcrosses to one of the parental races. We also tested for possible divergence of mate preference in females.ResultsWhile all male F-1 hybrids were sterile with sperm counts of zero, 48% of female F-1 hybrids produced offspring. Their litter sizes ranged from one to three which is significantly lower than the litter size of parental race females. When hybrid females were backcrossed to a parental race, half of the offspring resembled the parental race in karyotype and fertility, while the other half resembled the F-1 hybrids. In the preference test, females of both races indicated a lack of a preference for males of their own karyotype.ConclusionsAlthough the fertility of the F-1 hybrids was extremely low because of the complexity of the chromosomal differences between the races, reproductive isolation was not complete. As we did not find assortative female preferences, we expect that contact between these races would lead to the production of hybrids and that gene flow would occur eventually, as fertility can be restored fully after one backcross generation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number25
Number of pages15
JournalBMC Evolutionary Biology
Volume19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16-Jan-2019

Keywords

  • Speciation
  • Hybridisation
  • Centric fusion
  • Hybrid fertility
  • Hybrid dysfunction
  • Mate preference
  • Mus musculus domesticus
  • Robertsonian fusion
  • MUS-MUSCULUS-DOMESTICUS
  • SEMINIFEROUS EPITHELIUM
  • MEIOTIC RECOMBINATION
  • WILD MICE
  • ZONE
  • HETEROZYGOSITY
  • REARRANGEMENTS
  • KARYOTYPE
  • PATTERNS
  • MALES

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