Apparent selective neutrality of mitochondrial dna size variation: a test in the deep-sea scallop plactopecten magellanicus
Apparent selective neutrality of mitochondrial dna size variation: a test in the deep-sea scallop plactopecten magellanicusE. ZOUROS(1,2), G. H. POGSON(1), D. I. COOK(1) AND
M. J. DADSWELL3
(1) Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax,
Nova Scotia B3H 4J1, CANADA
(2)Department of Biology, University of Crete and Institute
of Marine Biology of Crete, Iraklion, Crete, GREECE
(3)Department of Biology, Acadia University, Wolfville,
Nova Scotia BOP 1XO, CANADA
Abstract. -Animal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is believed
to have evolved under intense selection for economy
of the size of the molecule. Among scallop species
mtDNA size may vary by a factor of two and among conspecific
individuals by as much as 25%. We have examined the
possibility that large mtDNA size differences may be
associated with fitness in the deep sea scallop Placopecten
magellanicus by comparing shell lengths of individuals
with different copy numbers of a large mtDNA repeated
sequence. Among juvenile cohorts of same age, shell
length is known to be a good index of overall fitness
in marine bivalves and it is shown here to be affected
by differences in nuclear genotype, expressed as the
degree of enzyme heterozygosity.We have observed no
correlation between shell length and mtDNA length and
interpreted this to mean that variation in the size
of animal mtDNA is effectively neutral to the forces
of natural selection acting on the individual. This
type of mtDNA variation must, therefore, be explained
in terms of biases in the molecular mechanisms causing
expansion or contraction of the molecule, differential
replication rates of mtDNA molecules of different size,
and the stochastic assortment of mtDNA size classes
among individuals.
Key words. -Growth rate, mtDNA, scallops, size variation.
Evolution, 46(5). 1992, pp. 1466-1476