RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Ancient balancing selection maintains incompatible versions of a conserved metabolic pathway in yeast JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 829325 DO 10.1101/829325 A1 James Boocock A1 Meru J Sadhu A1 Joshua S Bloom A1 Leonid Kruglyak YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/11/04/829325.abstract AB Differences in nutrient availability have led to the evolution of diverse metabolic strategies across species, but within species these strategies are expected to be similar. Here, we discovered that the galactose metabolic pathway in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae exists in two functionally distinct, incompatible states maintained by ancient balancing selection. We identified a genetic interaction for growth in galactose among the metabolic genes GAL2, GAL1/10/7, and PGM1. We engineered strains with all allelic combinations at these loci and showed that the reference allele of PGM1 is incompatible with the alternative alleles of the other genes. We observed a strong signature of ancient balancing selection at all three loci and found that the alternative alleles diverged from the reference alleles before the birth of the Saccharomyces sensu stricto species cluster 10-20 million years ago. Strains with the alternative alleles are found primarily in galactose-rich dairy environments, and they grow faster in galactose, but slower in glucose, revealing a tradeoff on which balancing selection may have acted.