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Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish

Understanding the extent to which ecological divergence is repeatable is essential for predicting responses of biodiversity to environmental change. Here we test the predictability of evolution, from genotype to phenotype, by studying parallel evolution in a salmonid fish, Arctic charr (Salvelinus a...

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Autores principales: Jacobs, Arne, Carruthers, Madeleine, Yurchenko, Andrey, Gordeeva, Natalia V., Alekseyev, Sergey S., Hooker, Oliver, Leong, Jong S., Minkley, David R., Rondeau, Eric B., Koop, Ben F., Adams, Colin E., Elmer, Kathryn R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32302300
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008658
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author Jacobs, Arne
Carruthers, Madeleine
Yurchenko, Andrey
Gordeeva, Natalia V.
Alekseyev, Sergey S.
Hooker, Oliver
Leong, Jong S.
Minkley, David R.
Rondeau, Eric B.
Koop, Ben F.
Adams, Colin E.
Elmer, Kathryn R.
author_facet Jacobs, Arne
Carruthers, Madeleine
Yurchenko, Andrey
Gordeeva, Natalia V.
Alekseyev, Sergey S.
Hooker, Oliver
Leong, Jong S.
Minkley, David R.
Rondeau, Eric B.
Koop, Ben F.
Adams, Colin E.
Elmer, Kathryn R.
author_sort Jacobs, Arne
collection PubMed
description Understanding the extent to which ecological divergence is repeatable is essential for predicting responses of biodiversity to environmental change. Here we test the predictability of evolution, from genotype to phenotype, by studying parallel evolution in a salmonid fish, Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus), across eleven replicate sympatric ecotype pairs (benthivorous-planktivorous and planktivorous-piscivorous) and two evolutionary lineages. We found considerable variability in eco-morphological divergence, with several traits related to foraging (eye diameter, pectoral fin length) being highly parallel even across lineages. This suggests repeated and predictable adaptation to environment. Consistent with ancestral genetic variation, hundreds of loci were associated with ecotype divergence within lineages of which eight were shared across lineages. This shared genetic variation was maintained despite variation in evolutionary histories, ranging from postglacial divergence in sympatry (ca. 10-15kya) to pre-glacial divergence (ca. 20-40kya) with postglacial secondary contact. Transcriptome-wide gene expression (44,102 genes) was highly parallel across replicates, involved biological processes characteristic of ecotype morphology and physiology, and revealed parallelism at the level of regulatory networks. This expression divergence was not only plastic but in part genetically controlled by parallel cis-eQTL. Lastly, we found that the magnitude of phenotypic divergence was largely correlated with the genetic differentiation and gene expression divergence. In contrast, the direction of phenotypic change was mostly determined by the interplay of adaptive genetic variation, gene expression, and ecosystem size. Ecosystem size further explained variation in putatively adaptive, ecotype-associated genomic patterns within and across lineages, highlighting the role of environmental variation and stochasticity in parallel evolution. Together, our findings demonstrate the parallel evolution of eco-morphology and gene expression within and across evolutionary lineages, which is controlled by the interplay of environmental stochasticity and evolutionary contingencies, largely overcoming variable evolutionary histories and genomic backgrounds.
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spelling pubmed-71645842020-04-22 Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish Jacobs, Arne Carruthers, Madeleine Yurchenko, Andrey Gordeeva, Natalia V. Alekseyev, Sergey S. Hooker, Oliver Leong, Jong S. Minkley, David R. Rondeau, Eric B. Koop, Ben F. Adams, Colin E. Elmer, Kathryn R. PLoS Genet Research Article Understanding the extent to which ecological divergence is repeatable is essential for predicting responses of biodiversity to environmental change. Here we test the predictability of evolution, from genotype to phenotype, by studying parallel evolution in a salmonid fish, Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus), across eleven replicate sympatric ecotype pairs (benthivorous-planktivorous and planktivorous-piscivorous) and two evolutionary lineages. We found considerable variability in eco-morphological divergence, with several traits related to foraging (eye diameter, pectoral fin length) being highly parallel even across lineages. This suggests repeated and predictable adaptation to environment. Consistent with ancestral genetic variation, hundreds of loci were associated with ecotype divergence within lineages of which eight were shared across lineages. This shared genetic variation was maintained despite variation in evolutionary histories, ranging from postglacial divergence in sympatry (ca. 10-15kya) to pre-glacial divergence (ca. 20-40kya) with postglacial secondary contact. Transcriptome-wide gene expression (44,102 genes) was highly parallel across replicates, involved biological processes characteristic of ecotype morphology and physiology, and revealed parallelism at the level of regulatory networks. This expression divergence was not only plastic but in part genetically controlled by parallel cis-eQTL. Lastly, we found that the magnitude of phenotypic divergence was largely correlated with the genetic differentiation and gene expression divergence. In contrast, the direction of phenotypic change was mostly determined by the interplay of adaptive genetic variation, gene expression, and ecosystem size. Ecosystem size further explained variation in putatively adaptive, ecotype-associated genomic patterns within and across lineages, highlighting the role of environmental variation and stochasticity in parallel evolution. Together, our findings demonstrate the parallel evolution of eco-morphology and gene expression within and across evolutionary lineages, which is controlled by the interplay of environmental stochasticity and evolutionary contingencies, largely overcoming variable evolutionary histories and genomic backgrounds. Public Library of Science 2020-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7164584/ /pubmed/32302300 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008658 Text en © 2020 Jacobs et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jacobs, Arne
Carruthers, Madeleine
Yurchenko, Andrey
Gordeeva, Natalia V.
Alekseyev, Sergey S.
Hooker, Oliver
Leong, Jong S.
Minkley, David R.
Rondeau, Eric B.
Koop, Ben F.
Adams, Colin E.
Elmer, Kathryn R.
Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title_full Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title_fullStr Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title_full_unstemmed Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title_short Parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a Holarctic fish
title_sort parallelism in eco-morphology and gene expression despite variable evolutionary and genomic backgrounds in a holarctic fish
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32302300
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008658
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