Non-pollinator selection for a floral homeotic mutant conferring loss of nectar reward in Aquilegia coerulea

Zachary Cabin,Nathan J. Derieg, Alexandra Garton, Timothy Ngo, Ashley Quezada, Constantine Gasseholm,Mark Simon,Scott A. Hodges

Current Biology(2022)

Cited 7|Views4
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Abstract
Here, we describe a polymorphic population of Aquilegia coerulea with a naturally occurring floral homeotic mutant, A. coerulea var. daileyae, where the characteristic petals with nectar spurs are replaced with a second set of sepals. Although it would be expected that this loss of pollinator reward would be disadvantageous to the mutant, we find that it has reached relatively high frequency (∼25%) and is under strong, positive selection across multiple seasons (s = 0.17–0.3) primarily due to reduced floral herbivory. We identify the underlying locus (APETALA3-3) and multiple causal loss-of-function mutations indicating an ongoing soft sweep. Elevated linkage disequilibrium around the two most common causal alleles indicates that positive selection has been occurring for many generations. Lastly, genotypic frequencies at AqAP3-3 indicate a degree of positive assortative mating by morphology. Together, these data provide both a compelling example that large-scale discontinuous morphological changes differentiating taxa can occur due to single mutations and a particularly clear example of linking genotype, phenotype, and fitness.
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Key words
positive selection,homeotic mutant,hopeful monster,soft sweep,assortative mating,herbivory,APETALA3-3,eco-evo-devo,discontinuous variation,floral development
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