scholarly journals Agouti-related peptide 2 facilitates convergent evolution of stripe patterns across cichlid fish radiations

Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 362 (6413) ◽  
pp. 457-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudius F. Kratochwil ◽  
Yipeng Liang ◽  
Jan Gerwin ◽  
Joost M. Woltering ◽  
Sabine Urban ◽  
...  

The color patterns of African cichlid fishes provide notable examples of phenotypic convergence. Across the more than 1200 East African rift lake species, melanic horizontal stripes have evolved numerous times. We discovered that regulatory changes of the gene agouti-related peptide 2 (agrp2) act as molecular switches controlling this evolutionarily labile phenotype. Reduced agrp2 expression is convergently associated with the presence of stripe patterns across species flocks. However, cis-regulatory mutations are not predictive of stripes across radiations, suggesting independent regulatory mechanisms. Genetic mapping confirms the link between the agrp2 locus and stripe patterns. The crucial role of agrp2 is further supported by a CRISPR-Cas9 knockout that reconstitutes stripes in a nonstriped cichlid. Thus, we unveil how a single gene affects the convergent evolution of a complex color pattern.

1973 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 245-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Egon T. Degens ◽  
Richard P. von Herzen ◽  
How-Kin Wong ◽  
Werner G. Deuser ◽  
Holger W. Jannasch

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew S. Cohen

<p>Over the past 20 years a series of scientific drilling campaigns around Africa have yielded exciting new information about the evolutionary ecological history of that continent. Most of these records have come from highly resolved lacustrine deposits with rapid sedimentation rates, and primarily, though not exclusively, have come from the East African Rift Valley, spanning the last ~3.5Ma. Important insights about both lacustrine and terrestrial ecosystem evolution have emerged, including ones with implications for the ecological context of human evolution. During the transition from the Late Pliocene warm period into the Quaternary, phytoliths, charcoal, pollen and leaf wax records are reshaping our understanding of fine scale structure of landscape vegetation transformation, and the implications these changes had for resources and cover that mammals (including early hominins) relied upon.  Pleistocene drill core paleoecological records from Lake Malawi have provided evidence for transformations of that lake’s ecosystem, including water column mixing, transparency and nutrient recycling, that help explain the explosive phylogenetic radiation of that lake’s extraordinary endemic cichlid fish fauna. And high-resolution records from that same lake spanning the time of the ~75ka Toba super-eruption allow us to test and falsify hypotheses linking volcanic activity to wholesale transformation of the African ecosystem, including purported links to modern human population bottlenecks. These valuable archives will in the future be complemented by even longer records from Africa’s oldest lake, L. Tanganyika, allowing us to build a comprehensive picture of African ecosystem evolution extending back to the late Miocene.</p>


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Mana ◽  
◽  
Merry Yue Cai ◽  
Catherine C. Beck ◽  
Steven L. Goldstein

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