The gonad as a mediator of life history tradeoffs: Antagonistic hormonal pleiotropy facilitates evolutionary divergence in reproductive strategies

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The gonad as a mediator of life history tradeoffs: Antagonistic hormonal pleiotropy facilitates evolutionary divergence in reproductive strategies

Authors

Farrar, V.; Patel, S.; Sumarli, A.; Samuk, K.; BELL, A.

Abstract

High investment in current reproduction can limit future reproductive opportunities, but how selection shapes these hormone-mediated traits remains poorly understood. Androgens can mediate male reproductive investment, and in three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus), exert antagonistic effects on breeding effort versus spermatogenesis. To understand how shifts in reproductive strategy shape this tradeoff, we compared testes transcriptomes and androgen production between two recently diverged stickleback ecotypes that differ in reproductive strategy: the ancestral `common` ecotype, which provides paternal care, and the non-parental `white` ecotype, which has lost paternal care and prioritizes mating effort. During typical breeding, testes gene expression differed little between ecotypes. However, under prolonged summer-like conditions, testes gene expression diverged substantially. Common-biased genes were enriched for meiotic functions and spermatogenic cell type markers, suggesting commons had initiated spermatogenesis while whites had not. Instead, whites expressed higher levels of steroidogenic candidate genes and released significantly more 11-ketotestosterone than commons, indicating sustained investment in current reproduction. F1 hybrids released 11-ketosterone at intermediate rates, suggesting a genetic basis for this divergence. Sustained androgen production in whites may possibly delay the transition into spermatogenesis, limiting investment in future reproduction. These results illustrate how selection on hormonally-integrated traits can drive rapid divergence in life history strategy.

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