North-South Colonization Associated with Local Adaptation of the Wild Tomato Species Solanum chilense

被引:35
|
作者
Boendel, Katharina B. [1 ]
Lainer, Hilde [1 ]
Nosenko, Tetyana [1 ]
Mboup, Mamadou [2 ]
Tellier, Aurelien [3 ]
Stephan, Wolfgang [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Munich, Sect Evolutionary Biol, Dept Biol 2, Planegg Martinsried, Germany
[2] European Res & Dev Ctr Crop Protect, DuPont Nemours, Nambsheim, France
[3] Tech Univ Munich, Ctr Life & Food Sci Weihenstephan, Sect Populat Genet, Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
关键词
demography; local adaptation; plant population genetics; positive selection; wild tomato; ADAPTIVE MOLECULAR EVOLUTION; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; GENETIC-VARIATION; DELETERIOUS MUTATIONS; SPATIAL GENETICS; STRESS TOLERANCE; ATACAMA DESERT; SELECTION; DROUGHT; POLYMORPHISM;
D O I
10.1093/molbev/msv166
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
After colonization population sizes may vary across the species range depending on environmental conditions and following colonizations. An interesting question is whether local adaptation occurs more frequently in large ancestral populations or in small derived populations. A higher number of newmutations and a lower effect of genetic drift should favor selection in large populations, whereas small derived populations may require an initial local adaptation event to facilitate the colonization of new habitats. Wild tomatoes are native to a broad range of different habitats characterized by variable abiotic conditions in South America, and represent an ideal system to study this interplay between demography and natural selection. Population genetic analyses and statistical inference of past demography were conducted on pooled-sequencing data from 30 genes (8,080 single nucleotide polymorphisms) from an extensive sampling of 23 Solanum chilense populations over Chile and Peru. We reveal first a north-south colonization associated with relaxed purifying selection in the south as shown by a decrease of genetic variation and an increasing proportion of nonsynonymous polymorphism from north to south, and population substructure with at least four genetic groups. Second, we uncover a dual picture of adaptation consisting of 1) a decreasing proportion of adaptive amino acid substitutions from north to south suggesting that adaptation is favored in large populations, whereas 2) signatures of local adaptation predominantly occur in the smaller populations from the marginal ranges in the south.
引用
收藏
页码:2932 / 2943
页数:12
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