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Wiley InterScience

Evolution

Evolution

Volume 61 Issue 11, Pages 2614 - 2622

Published Online: 23 Aug 2007

© 2010, Society for the Study of Evolution



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EVOLUTION OF HOST SPECIFICITY DRIVES REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION AMONG RNA VIRUSES
Siobain Duffy 1,2,3 , Christina L. Burch 3,4 , and Paul E. Turner 1,5
  1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520   2 E-mail: smd16@psu.edu   3 Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599   4 E-mail: cburch@bio.unc.edu   5 E-mail: paul.turner@yale.edu
Associate Editor: J. Koella
Copyright 2007 The Author(s). Journal compilation © 2007 The Society for the Study of Evolution
KEYWORDS
Assortative mating • bacteriophage • experimental evolution • host shift • parapatry

ABSTRACT

Ecological speciation hypotheses claim that assortative mating evolves as a consequence of divergent natural selection for ecologically important traits. Reproductive isolation is expected to be particularly likely to evolve by this mechanism in species such as phytophagous insects that mate in the habitats in which they eat. We tested this expectation by monitoring the evolution of reproductive isolation in laboratory populations of an RNA virus that undergoes genetic exchange only when multiple virus genotypes coinfect the same host. We subjected four populations of the RNA bacteriophage φ6 to 150 generations of natural selection on a novel host. Although there was no direct selection acting on host range in our experiment, three of the four populations lost the ability to infect one or more alternative hosts. In the most extreme case, one of the populations evolved a host range that does not contain any of the hosts infectible by the wild-type φ6. Whole genome sequencing confirmed that the resulting reproductive isolation was due to a single nucleotide change, highlighting the ease with which an emerging RNA virus can decouple its evolutionary fate from that of its ancestor. Our results uniquely demonstrate the evolution of reproductive isolation in allopatric experimental populations. Furthermore, our data confirm the biological credibility of simple "no-gene" mechanisms of assortative mating, in which this trait arises as a pleiotropic effect of genes responsible for ecological adaptation.


Received May 14, 2007
Accepted July 18, 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00226.x About DOI

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