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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Mating systems and protein–protein interactions determine evolutionary rates of primate sperm proteins
Holger HerlynDavid RosenkranzJulia Schumachersubject
Male1001DNA ComplementaryAcrosome reactionBiologysperm competitionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyProtein–protein interactionEvolution MolecularSexual Behavior Animalbrain proteinsCapacitationTestisAnimalsmating systemsexual selectionProtein Interaction Domains and MotifsSperm competitionResearch Articlesreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneticsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyHyperactivation70HaplorhiniSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineMating Preference Animal129Mating systemSpermatozoaSpermfunctional constraintSexual selectionbehavior and behavior mechanismssperm proteinsGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesdescription
To assess the relative impact of functional constraint and post-mating sexual selection on sequence evolution of reproductive proteins, we examined 169 primate sperm proteins. In order to recognize potential genome-wide trends, we additionally analysed a sample of altogether 318 non-reproductive (brain and postsynaptic) proteins. Based on cDNAs of eight primate species (Anthropoidea), we observed that pre-mating sperm proteins engaged in sperm composition and assembly show significantly lower incidence of site-specific positive selection and overall lower non-synonymous to synonymous substitution rates ( d N / d S ) across sites as compared with post-mating sperm proteins involved in capacitation, hyperactivation, acrosome reaction and fertilization. Moreover, database screening revealed overall more intracellular protein interaction partners in pre-mating than in post-mating sperm proteins. Finally, post-mating sperm proteins evolved at significantly higher evolutionary rates than pre-mating sperm and non-reproductive proteins on the branches to multi-male breeding species, while no such increase was observed on the branches to unimale and monogamous species. We conclude that less protein–protein interactions of post-mating sperm proteins account for lowered functional constraint, allowing for stronger impact of post-mating sexual selection, while the opposite holds true for pre-mating sperm proteins. This pattern is particularly strong in multi-male breeding species showing high female promiscuity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-12-06 | Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |