[Background] The haplochromine cichlid species assemblages of Lake Malawi and Victoria represent some of the most
important study systems in evolutionary biology. Identifying adaptive divergence between closely-related species can provide
important insights into the processes that may have contributed to these spectacular radiations. Here, we studied a pair of
sympatric Lake Malawi species, Pseudotropheus fainzilberi and P. emmiltos, whose reproductive isolation depends on
olfactory communication. We tested the hypothesis that these species have undergone divergent selection at MHC class II
genes, which are known to contribute to olfactory-based mate choice in other taxa.
[Methodology/Principal Findings]
Divergent selection on functional alleles was inferred from the higher genetic divergence at putative antigen binding sites
(ABS) amino acid sequences than at putatively neutrally evolving sites at intron 1, exon 2 synonymous sequences and exon 2
amino acid residues outside the putative ABS. In addition, sympatric populations of these fish species differed significantly in
communities of eukaryotic parasites.
[Conclusions/Significance] We propose that local host-parasite coevolutionary
dynamics may have driven adaptive divergence in MHC alleles, influencing odor-mediated mate choice and leading to
reproductive isolation. These results provide the first evidence for a novel mechanism of adaptive speciation and the first
evidence of adaptive divergence at the MHC in closely related African cichlid fishes.
JB was supported by a post-graduate scholarship from the Natural
Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada and Fond Québécois pour la
Nature et les Technologies of Quebec. JC was funded by an Advanced Research
Fellowship from the Natural and Environment Research Council (NER/J/S/2002/
00706) of the UK. Field work by CvO., JB, and JC was funded by the British
Ecological Society. CR was supported by the Consejo Superior de Investigacion
Scientifica of Spain. GFT was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
Research Council of the UK and field work by the Natural and Environment
Research Council of the UK. LB was funded by the Natural Science and
Engineering Research Council of Canada (Discovery Grant Program).
Peer reviewed