genetics of adaptation
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

51
(FIVE YEARS 7)

H-INDEX

22
(FIVE YEARS 2)

Evolution ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Connallon ◽  
Kathryn A. Hodgins

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy K O'Connor ◽  
Marissa C Sandoval ◽  
Jiarui Wang ◽  
Risa Takenaka ◽  
Myron Child ◽  
...  

Color polymorphic species can offer exceptional insight into the ecology and genetics of adaptation. Although the genetic architecture of animal coloration is diverse, many color polymorphisms are associated with large structural variants and maintained by biotic interactions. Grasshoppers are exceptionally polymorphic in both color and karyotype, making them excellent models for understanding the ecological drivers and genetic underpinnings of color variation. Banded and uniform morphs of the desert clicker grasshopper (Ligurotettix coquilletti) are found across the western deserts of North America. To address the hypothesis that predation maintains local color polymorphism and shapes regional crypsis variation, we surveyed morph frequencies and tested for covariation with two predation environments. Morphs coexisted at intermediate frequencies at most sites, consistent with local balancing selection. Morph frequencies covaried with the appearance of desert substrate -- an environment used only by females -- indicating that ground-foraging predators are major agents of selection on crypsis. We next addressed the hypothesized link between color variation and genome structure. To do so, we designed an approach for detecting inversions and indels using only RADseq data. The banded morph was perfectly correlated with a large putative indel. Remarkably, indel dominance differed among populations, a rare example of dominance evolution in nature.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavitra Muralidhar ◽  
Carl Veller

AbstractGenetic models of adaptation to a new environment have typically assumed that the alleles involved maintain a constant fitness dominance across the old and new environments. However, theories of dominance suggest that this should often not be the case. Instead, the alleles involved should frequently shift from recessive deleterious in the old environment to dominant beneficial in the new environment. Here, we study the consequences of these expected dominance shifts for the genetics of adaptation to a new environment. We find that dominance shifts increase the likelihood that adaptation occurs from the standing variation, and that multiple alleles from the standing variation are involved (a soft selective sweep). Furthermore, we find that expected dominance shifts increase the haplotypic diversity of selective sweeps, rendering soft sweeps more detectable in small genomic samples. In cases where an environmental change threatens the viability of the population, we show that expected dominance shifts of newly beneficial alleles increase the likelihood of evolutionary rescue and the number of alleles involved. Finally, we apply our results to a well-studied case of adaptation to a new environment: the evolution of pesticide resistance at the Ace locus in Drosophila melanogaster. We show that, under reasonable demographic assumptions, the expected dominance shift of resistant alleles causes soft sweeps to be the most frequent outcome in this case, with the primary source of these soft sweeps being the standing variation at the onset of pesticide use, rather than recurrent mutation thereafter.


2021 ◽  
pp. 247-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacco C. van Rijssel ◽  
Rob C. M. de Jong ◽  
Mary A. Kishe ◽  
Frans Witte

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 513-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana J. Rennison ◽  
Seth M. Rudman ◽  
Dolph Schluter

PLoS Genetics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. e1007989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saber Qanbari ◽  
Carl-Johan Rubin ◽  
Khurram Maqbool ◽  
Steffen Weigend ◽  
Annett Weigend ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ricard Solé ◽  
Santiago F. Elena

This chapter discusses the emergence of new pathogenic viruses due to human-driven changes. A virus can be defined as “emerging” if it meets one or more of the following conditions: an already known viral disease that spreads out in a new geographic area or population; an already known viral disease that spreads out in a new geographic area or population properties; and disease or virus that has been infecting humans for a long time but remained undetected until diagnosed for the first time due to increased surveillance or to new diagnostic tools. The remainder of the chapter covers emergent diseases linked to breakdown of the equilibrium between a species and its habitat (e.g., Hanta- or Arenaviruses); the genetics of adaptation to novel host; and epidemics of emergence.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esra Durmaz ◽  
Subhash Rajpurohit ◽  
Nicolas Betancourt ◽  
Daniel K. Fabian ◽  
Martin Kapun ◽  
...  

AbstractA fundamental aim of adaptation genomics is to identify polymorphisms that underpin variation in fitness traits. InD. melanogasterlatitudinal life-history clines exist on multiple continents and make an excellent system for dissecting the genetics of adaptation. We have previously identified numerous clinal SNPs in insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling (IIS), a pathway known from mutant studies to affect life history. However, the effects of natural variants in this pathway remain poorly understood. Here we investigate how two clinal alternative alleles atfoxo, a transcriptional effector of IIS, affect fitness components (viability, size, starvation resistance, fat content). We assessed this polymorphism from the North American cline by reconstituting outbred populations, fixed for either the low- or high-latitude allele, from inbred DGRP lines. Since diet and temperature modulate IIS, we phenotyped alleles across two temperatures (18°C, 25°C) and two diets differing in sugar source and content. Consistent with clinal expectations, the high-latitude allele conferred larger body size and reduced wing loading. Alleles also differed in starvation resistance and expression ofInR, a transcriptional target of FOXO. Allelic reaction norms were mostly parallel, with few GxE interactions. Together, our results suggest that variation in IIS makes a major contribution to clinal life-history adaptation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document