Chimeric protein complexes in hybrid species generate novel evolutionary phenotypes
Elzbieta M. Piatkowska, David Knight, Daniela Delneri

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that chimeric protein complexes form naturally in hybrid species, contributing to phenotypic diversity and adaptive potential, with specific complexes influencing hybrid fitness in different environments.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that chimeric protein complexes can assemble spontaneously in hybrids, revealing a novel mechanism for phenotypic innovation and plasticity.
Findings
Chimeric complexes form spontaneously in hybrids.
Different complexes influence hybrid fitness in various environments.
Chimeric formation can confer adaptive advantages.
Abstract
Hybridization between species is an important mechanism for the origin of novel lineages and adaptation to new environments. Increased allelic variation and modification of the transcriptional network are the two recognized forces currently deemed to be responsible for the phenotypic properties seen in hybrids. However, since the majority of the biological functions in a cell are carried out by protein complexes, inter-specific protein assemblies therefore represent another important source of natural variation upon which evolutionary forces can act. Here we studied the composition of six protein complexes in two different Saccharomyces "sensu strictu" hybrids, to understand whether chimeric interactions can be freely formed in the cell in spite of species-specific co-evolutionary forces, and whether the different types of complexes cause a change in hybrid fitness. The protein…
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