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Hidden Effects of X Chromosome Introgressions on Spermatogenesis in Drosophila simulans x D. mauritiana Hybrids Unveiled by Interactions Among Minor Genetic Factors
Xulio R. Masidea, José P. Barrala, and Horacio F. Naveiraaa Departamento de Bioloxía Celular e Molecular, Facultade de Ciencias, Universidade de A Coruña, 15071 A Coruña, Spain
Corresponding author: Horacio F. Naveira, Departamento de Bioloxía Celular e Molecular, Facultade de Ciencias, Universidade de A Coruña, Campus da Zapateira s/n, 15071 A Coruña, Spain., horaci{at}udc.es (E-mail).
| ABSTRACT |
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One of the most frequent outcomes of interspecific hybridizations in Drosophila is hybrid male sterility. Genetic dissection of this reproductive barrier has revealed that the number of responsible factors is very high and that these factors are frequently engaged in complex epistatic interactions. Traditionally, research strategies have been based on contrasting introgressions of chromosome segments that produce male sterility with those that allow fertility. Few studies have investigated the phenotypes associated with the boundary between fertility and sterility. In this study, we cointrogressed three different X chromosome segments from Drosophila mauritiana into D. simulans. Hybrid males with these three segments are usually fertile, by conventional fertility assays. However, their spermatogenesis shows a significant slowdown, most manifest at lower temperatures. Each of the three introgressed segments retards the arrival of sperm to the seminal vesicles. Other small disturbances in spermatogenesis are evident, which altogether lead to an overall reduction in the amount of motile sperm in their seminal vesicles. These results suggest that a delay in the timing of spermatogenesis, which might be brought about by the cumulative action of many different factors of minor segment, may be the primary cause of hybrid male sterility.
HYBRID male sterility factors in Drosophila apparently have evolved more rapidly than either female sterility or inviability determinants (![]()
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Fertility testing of introgressions is usually carried out by observing the ability to leave offspring after single or mass matings, or simply by checking for the presence of motile sperm in seminal vesicles. Higher resolution of introgression effects would be possible through progeny counts (![]()
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We have introgressed three X-linked regions from D. mauritiana into D. simulans. Hybrid males bearing just a single one of these regions, any pairwise combination, or even the full set of the three of them are able to leave offspring, although the amount of motile sperm is severely reduced in some of the genotypic classes. Their spermatogenesis is considerably slowed down, but cytological abnormalities are not very conspicuous: (1) a different shape in the nucleolus of mature primary spermatocytes; (2) a higher than normal number of nuclei in the tail region of elongated cysts; and (3) an accumulation of degenerating coiled sperm bundles, with scattered sperm nuclei, at the basal region of the testis. The delay in the timing of spermatogenesis may be the primary effect of introgressions, which later gives rise to all the observed cytological abnormalities and eventually to a reduced production of motile sperm. This effect is increased by the combined action of different introgressed factors. It is our hypothesis that complete sterility results from pushing this time lag too far, after the introgression of a "sufficient" number of factors (polygenic combination) scattered throughout the genome.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and mutants:
A D. simulans strain carrying the X-linked mutations y, w, v, m, and f (y, yellow, 1B; w, white, 3C; v, vermilion, 10A; m, miniature, 10E; f, forked, 15F) was constructed from existing mutant stocks. Females from this strain were crossed with males from a wild-type strain of D. mauritiana, and F1 hybrid females were backcrossed to the D. simulans strain (F1 hybrid males are always sterile). Individual backcrosses were repeated during several (at least 10) generations in three different directions by selecting just one of these three markers: y+, m+, or f+. Males bearing any of these markers are introgressive hybrids. At the beginning of the introgressive hybridization most of these males are sterile, but after several backcross generations fertile males can be easily obtained, after the elimination of the major part of the D. mauritiana genome (![]()
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The D. simulans m and v strains were kindly supplied by J. Coyne. All the other mutant strains of this species were provided by the Mid-American Drosophila Stock Center (Bowling Green, OH). The D. mauritiana wild-type stock was supplied by J. F. McDonald from a collection by J. David (CNRS, France). All crosses were carried out using instant Drosophila medium, formula 4-24 from Carolina Biological Supply Company, at room temperature (2125°), unless otherwise specified.
DNA markers:
Approximate lengths of intact chromosome segments cointrogressed with y+, m+, and f+ were determined on the basis of the species-specific DNA sequence of PCR products from the loci armadillo (arm, placed in cytological interval 2B15), RNA polymeraseII-215-kD subunit (RpII215, 10C2-5), gastrulation defective (gd, 11A7-8), rudimentary (r, 15A), beta Spectrin (ßSpec, 16C1-4), and Shaker (Sh, 16F). DNA from individual flies was extracted according to protocol 48 of ![]()
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Assays of male fertility:
The fertility of hybrid males and controls was determined by dissection. Flies were cultured at 23° during at least one generation, and emerging males were aged for at least 3 days at this same temperature before the assay. Testes and vasa deferentia were dissected in 0.9% NaCl saline solution, and the seminal vesicles were checked for the presence of motile sperm. Males were classified as fertile if any motile sperm were observed. Average time for sperm to be released into 50% of the seminal vesicles (t50) and 95% confidence intervals was estimated by probit regression analysis after log transformation of the time from ecdysis (in hours), using SPSS 7.5. One generation of flies was raised at the corresponding temperature (either 18° or 21°), and the emerging males were aged at this temperature before the assay, which was carried out for age intervals of 624 hr (males grown at 18°) or 612 hr (21°), by the same technique described above.
Spermatogenesis:
The analysis of spermatogenesis was performed by three different methods. Live premeiotic and postmeiotic stages, up to the beginning of spermatid cyst elongation, were characterized under phase contrast optics, after dissection of the testes in saline solution and very gentle squashing. To determine the number of cysts in either preindividualization, individualization, or spiralization stages (Figure 3), testes were dissected in saline solution, transferred to 45% acetic acid for 10 sec and then to a drop of lactic acetic orcein (60:40), gently squashed in the same solution, and examined immediately under phase contrast. This same technique was applied to count spermatid nuclei in the head region of the cysts. In contrast, counts of nuclei in the tail region were obtained after staining with DAPI (4',6-daimidino-2-phenylindole dichloride) and observation with a fluorescence microscope: testes were dissected in saline solution and their sheaths removed to allow the cysts to spread in the fluid; the tissue was air-dried, immediately fixed in a drop of alcohol (70%), air-dried again, and stained in the dark with a drop of DAPI (0.5 µg/ml in 0.18 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5); when completely dried, the slides were mounted in fluormount and stored in the dark at 4°.
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Microscopy:
Live and orcein-stained slides were examined under phase contrast with an Olympus photomicroscope (Olympus, Lake Success, NY), objective UPlanFl 0.75 Ph2 x40. DAPI-stained slides were examined with a Nikon photomicroscope with epifluorescence equipment (Nikon, Melville, NY). A high-pressure mercury lamp DC 100 W USHIO was used for illumination, with Nikon filter combination EX330~380, DM400, BA420, and objective CF Fluor 0.85 x40. Photographs were taken on either Agfapan 25 Professional or Kodak Gold 100 film.
| RESULTS |
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We have introduced three marker alleles of the X chromosome from D. mauritiana into D. simulans by repeated backcrossing. The presence of each of these markers actually indicates the cointrogression of a linked intact chromosome segment from D. mauritiana, containing an indeterminate number of other genes from this species, which may or may not affect hybrid male fertility. Among the several independent lines thus obtained, we have selected three in which hybrid male fertility is apparently not affected (strains of type A, B, and C in Figure 1). As shown in Table 1, sterility frequencies at 23° in these hybrid males were very low and similar to those of pure D. simulans (0.40.8%). When the three different introgressed segments were recombined into the same genome to build strain H (Figure 1 and Figure 2), sterility frequencies increased slightly to 4.6% (
2 = 8.33, P = 0.004). Hybrid males of strain H are thus usually fertile. However, DAPI staining of their spermatid cysts revealed a large difference in D. simulans controls (Table 2,
2 = 182.5, P < 0.5%), showing that many unelongated spermatid nuclei are displaced from their normal position in the head region of the cysts. Thus, 58% of the cysts in these hybrids contained at least 11 nuclei (over a maximum of 64) lagging in the tail region, compared to only 1% in D. simulans. Or, shown in a different way, whereas nearly 52% of the cysts of D. simulans had all the nuclei properly positioned in the head region, not a single cyst of this kind was found in the hybrids, which 90% of the time had only between 30 and 60 nuclei in this region (Table 3). No conspicuous differences in size were apparent among nuclei, in either head or tail regions. Orcein staining of relatively undisturbed elongating or fully elongated cysts shows the progressive enrichment in individualization and spiralization stages within the testis, as flies develop (Table 4). So, in young pupae of D. simulans, 73% of the cysts contained spermatids that had not begun to individualize, in 26%, individualization had already started, and in only 1%, spermatid spiralization was taking place. These numbers changed to 40, 45, and 15%, respectively, in recently emerged adults (< 6 hr since ecdysis). Hybrids show a similar pattern, but are considerably delayed in developmental time. So, the contents of the testes of recently emerged hybrid adults strongly resemble those of D. simulans young pupae (
2 = 1.8, P = 0.407). Correspondingly, the vast majority (94%) of the cysts from young hybrid pupae contained spermatids that had not even begun to individualize, and it was in adults 1836 hr old that the expected increase in individualization and spiralization stages was observed. More evidence of this apparent delay in the timing of hybrid spermatogenesis is provided by the analysis of live cells in the testes of third-instar larvae and prepupae (Table 5). Up to 27% of the testes from D. simulans larvae contained at least a few elongating cysts, but in only 2% of the testes of hybrid larvae had spermatogenesis arrived thus far; in fact, the most advanced stages reached by spermatogenesis in the majority (48%) of hybrid larvae were primary spermatocytes, while all the testes inspected in D. simulans contained several cysts that had already left meiosis behind. In hybrid prepupae, although elongating cysts are frequently observed (13%), 31% of the testes had not gone beyond premeiotic or meiotic stages.
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All the observations described above were carried out at 23° on hybrids from strain H, which bears three different introgressed X chromosome segments. To investigate the contribution of each of these segments to the apparent slowdown of spermatogenesis, we recorded the time taken for sperm to be released into the seminal vesicles of different kinds of recombinant males, which contained just one or two of the D. mauritiana chromosome markers, as well as control males from strain H, D. simulans ywvmf, and D. mauritiana wild type. Flies were raised and aged at 18° to enhance the differences among genotypic classes (Table 6). As expected, males bearing the three chromosome markers (strain H) become fertile considerably later than D. simulans or D. mauritiana, which are not significantly different. However, the lag in the arrival of sperm to the seminal vesicles shows a clear interaction with temperature: the time for 50% of the males to become fertile (t50) is nearly nine times greater for strain H than for D. simulans at 18°, but barely two times greater when the temperature is raised to 21°. All the introgressed segments retard the spermatogenesis at 18°, with the one marked by m+ making the largest contribution, but their effects are not independent. So, combinations m+f+ and y+f+ produce the same effect as single markers, whereas y+m+ produces an even greater slowdown than the cointrogression of the three segments. No dissection of the effects of the different markers has been carried out at 23°. At this temperature, all the D. simulans males 06 hr old had motile sperm. In contrast, no sperm were observed in males 06 hr old from stock H, but all the males examined in the interval 3048 hr already had them.
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As far as cytological disturbances in hybrid spermatogenesis are concerned, only two were noted in strain H, in addition to the misplacement and incomplete elongation of spermatid nuclei in the tail region of the cysts. First, abnormal nucleoli, with characteristic extrusions, were observed in all the mature primary spermatocytes (Figure 4). Second, there was an accumulation of degenerating coiled sperm bundles in the basal testicular region, just before the constriction that marks the entry to the seminal vesicle, which generally contained only a few motile sperm. The coiling stage is apparently normal at first, with sperm nuclei lying closely associated at the center of the coiled tails (Figure 5A), but then these nuclei are scattered (Figure 5B), and cysts finally degenerate.
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All these disturbances in males from strain H lead to a reduction in their amount of motile sperm, but generally not so much as to prevent them from leaving at least some offspring. This is what ![]()
To find out approximate lengths of introgressed segments from D. mauritiana in strain H, a high-resolution mapping experiment was undertaken. Six genes were examined both in the parental stocks of D. simulans and D. mauritiana and in the resulting hybrid strain H. The diagnostic features of the sequences obtained are outlined in Figure 6, where D. melanogaster is also included as a reference. Twelve nucleotide differences were found between D. mauritiana and D. simulans in the analyzed region of armadillo, 7 were found in RpII215, 10 in gastrulation defective, 1 in beta Spectrin, and 10 in Shaker. As regards rudimentary, despite several attempts with different DNA samples at annealing temperatures from 55° to 50°, the PCR product from D. mauritiana could not be observed in our routine agarose gels, whereas an abundant product was always obtained from D. simulans. Only after reduction of the annealing temperature to 48°, was a faint band of the expected size also observed in D. mauritiana. In this case, then, the origin of DNA (either simulans or mauritiana) in the hybrid strain was inferred simply by the presence or absence of a PCR product at the restrictive annealing temperatures. With the aid of these DNA markers and the information from visible mutants that we already had, we could establish approximate bounds for each of the three introgressed segments from D. mauritiana into the X chromosome of D. simulans. Our results are shown in Figure 7. The segment marked by yellow (y+) ends before reaching armadillo (i.e., it extends from the telomere to an undetermined point before 2B in the polytene map). The intact segment marked by miniature (m+) begins somewhere between vermilion (10A) and RpII215 (10C) and ends before gastrulation defective (11A). Finally, the segment marked by forked (f+) initiates after rudimentary (15A) and ends after beta Spectrin (16C), but before reaching Shaker (16F).
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| DISCUSSION |
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There is increasing evidence that the building blocks of hybrid male sterility are not single genes capable of causing sterility by themselves in a foreign background, but interacting gene sets made out of minor factors whose individual introgression has virtually no effect on male fertility (for reviews see ![]()
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The results presented in this article indicate that the immediate effect of an introgression is, apparently, a simple delay in the timing of spermatogenesis that is enhanced when different introgressions are recombined into the same genome to give rise to subfertile males. No marked cytological disturbances were observed. Counts of spermatid nuclei per cyst and the similar sizes of these nuclei indicate that the four successive mitotic divisions of spermatogonia and the two meiotic divisions ordinarily take place. The somewhat abnormal shape of the nucleolus, or bodies attached to it, detected in all the mature primary spermatocytes of males from strain H, might indicate problems in the assembly of ribosomal particles and thus a reduction in overall translation rate. The abnormal abdomen syndrome of D. mercatorum, produced by a decrease in functional rDNA, actually causes delayed sexual maturation in males and yet no change in egg-to-adult development time (![]()
All our results show a considerable heterogeneity: within the same testis, between both testes of the same male, within hybrids of the same genotype raised at the same temperature, among different temperatures, and among different genotypes. In spite of this diversity, significant effects were detected.
First, the subfertility associated with some introgressions is extremely cold sensitive, so that it would be unwise to carry out sterility tests at temperatures below 21°. In this respect, introgressions seem to intensify the effects of temperature on the control cultures of D. simulans. In this species, it takes about 20 hr at 18° for 50% of the males to have motile sperm in their seminal vesicles, but newly eclosed males at 23° already have them. Apparently, the slowdown of developmental processes produced by raising the flies at lower temperatures affects the germ line more than the soma. This difference is greatly exacerbated in the hybrids.
Second, not all the introgressed segments produce the same effect. This was best shown at 18°. The segment marked by m+ brings about the largest delay in spermatogenesis, and f+ the smallest one. Besides, the three segments are engaged in complex interactions. Whereas the combination y+m+ retards spermatogenesis considerably more than expected from an independent additive contribution of each segment, the incorporation of f+ seems to alleviate this effect very moderately.
It is important to realize that the different introgressions do not exhibit qualitatively distinct effects on spermatogenesis. The differences among them are apparently a simple question of degree. On the other hand, they do not display conspicuous phenes, but a perturbation in the timing of spermatogenesis stages. However, consecutive morphogenetic events are controlled and executed by independent programs (![]()
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The three X chromosome regions introgressed from D. mauritiana into D. simulans that we studied in this article had been the subject of previous analysis. First, ![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are particularly grateful to E. Hauschteck-Jungen, from the University of Zürich, for her hospitality and valuable assistance with DAPI staining. We thank J. Coyne and J. F. McDonald for providing fly stocks and N. Johnson and an anonymous referee for their very helpful suggestions to improve the original manuscript. This work was supported by grants from Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (PB92-0386) and Xunta de Galicia (XUGA 10305B95), Spain. X.M. and J.B. were supported by fellowships from Xunta de Galicia and Universidade da Coruña.
Manuscript received October 16, 1997; Accepted for publication June 29, 1998.
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