A few essential genetic loci distinguish Penstemon species with flowers adapted to pollination by bees or hummingbirds

被引:13
作者
Wessinger, Carolyn A. [1 ]
Katzer, Amanda M. [2 ]
Hime, Paul M. [3 ,4 ,6 ,7 ]
Rausher, Mark D. [5 ]
Kelly, John K. [2 ]
Hileman, Lena C. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ South Carolina, Dept Biol Sci, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[2] Univ Kansas, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Lawrence, KS USA
[3] Univ Kansas, Biodivers Inst, Lawrence, KS USA
[4] Univ Kansas, Nat Hist Museum, Lawrence, KS USA
[5] Duke Univ, Dept Biol, Durham, NC USA
[6] Washington Univ, McDonnell Genome Inst, Sch Med St Louis, St Louis, MO USA
[7] Washington Univ, Dept Genet, Sch Med St Louis, St Louis, MO USA
关键词
FLORAL TRAITS; AQUILEGIA-FORMOSA; GENOMIC ISLANDS; REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION; DIVERGENT SELECTION; NATURAL-SELECTION; EVOLUTION; SPECIATION; DIFFERENTIATION; MORPHOLOGY;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pbio.3002294
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
In the formation of species, adaptation by natural selection generates distinct combinations of traits that function well together. The maintenance of adaptive trait combinations in the face of gene flow depends on the strength and nature of selection acting on the underlying genetic loci. Floral pollination syndromes exemplify the evolution of trait combinations adaptive for particular pollinators. The North American wildflower genus Penstemon displays remarkable floral syndrome convergence, with at least 20 separate lineages that have evolved from ancestral bee pollination syndrome (wide blue-purple flowers that present a landing platform for bees and small amounts of nectar) to hummingbird pollination syndrome (bright red narrowly tubular flowers offering copious nectar). Related taxa that differ in floral syndrome offer an attractive opportunity to examine the genomic basis of complex trait divergence. In this study, we characterized genomic divergence among 229 individuals from a Penstemon species complex that includes both bee and hummingbird floral syndromes. Field plants are easily classified into species based on phenotypic differences and hybrids displaying intermediate floral syndromes are rare. Despite unambiguous phenotypic differences, genome-wide differentiation between species is minimal. Hummingbird-adapted populations are more genetically similar to nearby bee-adapted populations than to geographically distant hummingbird-adapted populations, in terms of genome-wide d(XY). However, a small number of genetic loci are strongly differentiated between species. These approximately 20 "species-diagnostic loci," which appear to have nearly fixed differences between pollination syndromes, are sprinkled throughout the genome in high recombination regions. Several map closely to previously established floral trait quantitative trait loci (QTLs). The striking difference between the diagnostic loci and the genome as whole suggests strong selection to maintain distinct combinations of traits, but with sufficient gene flow to homogenize the genomic background. A surprisingly small number of alleles confer phenotypic differences that form the basis of species identity in this species complex.
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页数:24
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