Allozyme and RFLP Heterozygosities as Correlates of Growth Rate in the Scallop Placopecten magellanicus: A Test of the Associative Overdominance Hypothesis
Allozyme and RFLP Heterozygosities as Correlates of Growth Rate in the Scallop Placopecten magellanicus: A Test of the Associative Overdominance Hypothesis
Grant H. Pogson(1) and Eleftherios Zouros(1,2)
(1) Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax,
Nova, Scotia B3H 4J1 Canada, ('2) Department of Biology,
University of Crete, Iraklion, Crete, Greece
Manuscript received September 10, 1993
Accepted for publication January 27, 1994
Abstract
Several studies have reported positive correlations
between the degree of enzyme heterozygosity and fitness-related
traits. Notable among these are the correlations between
heterozygosity and growth rate in marine bivalves.
Whether the correlation is the result of intrinsic
functional differences between enzyme variants at the
electrophoretic loci scored or arises from non-random
genotypic associations between these loci and others
segregating for deleterious recessive genes (the associative
overdominance hypothesis) is a matter of continuing
debate. A prediction of the associative overdominance
hypothesis, not shared by explanations that treat the
enzyme loci as causative agents of the correlation,
is that the correlation is not specific to the type
of genetic marker used. We have tested this prediction
by scoring heterozygosity at single locus nuclear restriction
fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPS) in a cohort of
juvenile scallops (Placopecten magellanicus) in which
growth rate was known to be positively correlated with
an individual's degree of allozyme heterozygosity.
A total of 222 individuals were scored for their genotypes
at seven allozyme loci, two nonspecific protein loci
of unknown function and eight nuclear RFLPs detected
by anonymous cDNA probes. In contrast to the enzyme
loci, no correlation was observed between growth rate
and the degree of heterozygosity at the DNA markers.
Furthermore, there was no relationship between the
magnitude of heterozygote deficiency at a locus and
its effect on the correlation. The differences observed
between the effects of allozyme and RFLP heterozygosity
on growth rate provide evidence against the associative
overdominance hypothesis, but a strong case against
this explanation must await corroboration from similar
studies in different species.
Genetics 137: 221-231 (May 1994)