Genome divergence during evolutionary diversification as revealed in replicate lake-stream stickleback population pairs

被引:207
作者
Roesti, Marius [1 ]
Hendry, Andrew P. [2 ,3 ]
Salzburger, Walter [1 ]
Berner, Daniel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basel, Inst Zool, CH-4051 Basel, Switzerland
[2] McGill Univ, Dept Biol, Montreal, PQ H3A 2K6, Canada
[3] McGill Univ, Redpath Museum, Montreal, PQ H3A 2K6, Canada
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 瑞士国家科学基金会; 加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
FST outlier; Gasterosteus aculeatus; gene flow; next generation sequencing; population genomics; RAD; speciation; THREESPINE STICKLEBACK; ADAPTIVE DIVERGENCE; GENE FLOW; PARALLEL EVOLUTION; DNA POLYMORPHISM; HITCHHIKING; SELECTION; RECOMBINATION; SPECIATION; INVERSIONS;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05509.x
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
Evolutionary diversification is often initiated by adaptive divergence between populations occupying ecologically distinct environments while still exchanging genes. The genetic foundations of this divergence process are largely unknown and are here explored through genome scans in multiple independent lakestream population pairs of threespine stickleback. We find that across the pairs, overall genomic divergence is associated with the magnitude of divergence in phenotypes known to be under divergent selection. Along this same axis of increasing diversification, genomic divergence becomes increasingly biased towards the centre of chromosomes as opposed to the peripheries. We explain this pattern by within-chromosome variation in the physical extent of hitchhiking, as recombination is greatly reduced in chromosome centres. Correcting for this effect suggests that a great number of genes distributed widely across the genome are involved in the divergence into lake vs. stream habitats. Analyzing additional allopatric population pairs, however, reveals that strong divergence in some genomic regions has been driven by selection unrelated to lakestream ecology. Our study highlights a major contribution of large-scale variation in recombination rate to generating heterogeneous genomic divergence and indicates that elucidating the genetic basis of adaptive divergence might be more challenging than currently recognized.
引用
收藏
页码:2852 / 2862
页数:11
相关论文
共 64 条
[1]   The genetics of adaptive shape shift in stickleback: Pleiotropy and effect size [J].
Albert, Arianne Y. K. ;
Sawaya, Sterling ;
Vines, Timothy H. ;
Knecht, Anne K. ;
Miller, Craig T. ;
Summers, Brian R. ;
Balabhadra, Sarita ;
Kingsley, David M. ;
Schluter, Dolph .
EVOLUTION, 2008, 62 (01) :76-85
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2010, R LANG ENV STAT COMP
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1977, GEOGRAPHIC VARIATION
[4]   Convergence and parallelism reconsidered: what have we learned about the genetics of adaptation? [J].
Arendt, Jeff ;
Reznick, David .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2008, 23 (01) :26-32
[5]   Rapid SNP Discovery and Genetic Mapping Using Sequenced RAD Markers [J].
Baird, Nathan A. ;
Etter, Paul D. ;
Atwood, Tressa S. ;
Currey, Mark C. ;
Shiver, Anthony L. ;
Lewis, Zachary A. ;
Selker, Eric U. ;
Cresko, William A. ;
Johnson, Eric A. .
PLOS ONE, 2008, 3 (10)
[6]   THE BARRIER TO GENETIC EXCHANGE BETWEEN HYBRIDIZING POPULATIONS [J].
BARTON, N ;
BENGTSSON, BO .
HEREDITY, 1986, 57 :357-376
[7]   Genetic hitchhiking [J].
Barton, NH .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2000, 355 (1403) :1553-1562
[8]   Identifying adaptive genetic divergence among populations from genome scans [J].
Beaumont, MA ;
Balding, DJ .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2004, 13 (04) :969-980
[9]   Natural selection drives patterns of lake-stream divergence in stickleback foraging morphology [J].
Berner, D. ;
Adams, D. C. ;
Grandchamp, A. -C. ;
Hendry, A. P. .
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2008, 21 (06) :1653-1665
[10]   Quantitative genetic inheritance of morphological divergence in a lake-stream stickleback ecotype pair: implications for reproductive isolation [J].
Berner, D. ;
Kaeuffer, R. ;
Grandchamp, A. -C. ;
Raeymaekers, J. A. M. ;
Raesaenen, K. ;
Hendry, A. P. .
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2011, 24 (09) :1975-1983