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Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects

Evolution can repeat itself, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Moreover, parallel evolution sometimes, but not always, uses the same genes. Two main hypotheses have been put forth to explain the probability and extent of parallel evolution. Fir...

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Autores principales: Chaturvedi, Samridhi, Gompert, Zachariah, Feder, Jeffrey L., Osborne, Owen G., Muschick, Moritz, Riesch, Rüdiger, Soria-Carrasco, Víctor, Nosil, Patrik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7613875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36280782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-022-01909-6
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author Chaturvedi, Samridhi
Gompert, Zachariah
Feder, Jeffrey L.
Osborne, Owen G.
Muschick, Moritz
Riesch, Rüdiger
Soria-Carrasco, Víctor
Nosil, Patrik
author_facet Chaturvedi, Samridhi
Gompert, Zachariah
Feder, Jeffrey L.
Osborne, Owen G.
Muschick, Moritz
Riesch, Rüdiger
Soria-Carrasco, Víctor
Nosil, Patrik
author_sort Chaturvedi, Samridhi
collection PubMed
description Evolution can repeat itself, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Moreover, parallel evolution sometimes, but not always, uses the same genes. Two main hypotheses have been put forth to explain the probability and extent of parallel evolution. First, parallel evolution is more likely when shared ecologies result in similar patterns of natural selection in different taxa. Second, parallelism is more likely when genomes are similar, because of shared standing variation and similar mutational effects in closely related genomes. Here we combine ecological, genomic, experimental, and phenotypic data with Bayesian modeling and randomization tests to quantify the degree of parallelism and its relationship with ecology and genetics. Our results show that the extent to which genomic regions associated with climate are parallel among species of Timema stick insects is shaped collectively by shared ecology and genomic background. Specifically, the extent of genomic parallelism decays with divergence in climatic conditions (i.e., habitat or ecological similarity) and genomic similarity. Moreover, we find that climate-associated loci are likely subject to selection in a field experiment, overlap with genetic regions associated with cuticular hydrocarbon traits, and are not strongly shaped by introgression between species. Our findings shed light on when evolution is most expected to repeat itself.
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spelling pubmed-76138752023-04-24 Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects Chaturvedi, Samridhi Gompert, Zachariah Feder, Jeffrey L. Osborne, Owen G. Muschick, Moritz Riesch, Rüdiger Soria-Carrasco, Víctor Nosil, Patrik Nat Ecol Evol Article Evolution can repeat itself, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Moreover, parallel evolution sometimes, but not always, uses the same genes. Two main hypotheses have been put forth to explain the probability and extent of parallel evolution. First, parallel evolution is more likely when shared ecologies result in similar patterns of natural selection in different taxa. Second, parallelism is more likely when genomes are similar, because of shared standing variation and similar mutational effects in closely related genomes. Here we combine ecological, genomic, experimental, and phenotypic data with Bayesian modeling and randomization tests to quantify the degree of parallelism and its relationship with ecology and genetics. Our results show that the extent to which genomic regions associated with climate are parallel among species of Timema stick insects is shaped collectively by shared ecology and genomic background. Specifically, the extent of genomic parallelism decays with divergence in climatic conditions (i.e., habitat or ecological similarity) and genomic similarity. Moreover, we find that climate-associated loci are likely subject to selection in a field experiment, overlap with genetic regions associated with cuticular hydrocarbon traits, and are not strongly shaped by introgression between species. Our findings shed light on when evolution is most expected to repeat itself. 2022-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7613875/ /pubmed/36280782 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-022-01909-6 Text en https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-research/policies/accepted-manuscript-termsUsers may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-research/policies/accepted-manuscript-terms
spellingShingle Article
Chaturvedi, Samridhi
Gompert, Zachariah
Feder, Jeffrey L.
Osborne, Owen G.
Muschick, Moritz
Riesch, Rüdiger
Soria-Carrasco, Víctor
Nosil, Patrik
Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title_full Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title_fullStr Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title_full_unstemmed Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title_short Climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in Timema stick insects
title_sort climatic similarity and genomic background shape the extent of parallel adaptation in timema stick insects
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7613875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36280782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-022-01909-6
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