Kingsley Evan P, Manceau Marie, Wiley Christopher D, Hoekstra Hopi E
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2009 Jul 30;4(7):e6435. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0006435.
Identifying the molecular basis of phenotypes that have evolved independently can provide insight into the ways genetic and developmental constraints influence the maintenance of phenotypic diversity. Melanic (darkly pigmented) phenotypes in mammals provide a potent system in which to study the genetic basis of naturally occurring mutant phenotypes because melanism occurs in many mammals, and the mammalian pigmentation pathway is well understood. Spontaneous alleles of a few key pigmentation loci are known to cause melanism in domestic or laboratory populations of mammals, but in natural populations, mutations at one gene, the melanocortin-1 receptor (Mc1r), have been implicated in the vast majority of cases, possibly due to its minimal pleiotropic effects. To investigate whether mutations in this or other genes cause melanism in the wild, we investigated the genetic basis of melanism in the rodent genus Peromyscus, in which melanic mice have been reported in several populations. We focused on two genes known to cause melanism in other taxa, Mc1r and its antagonist, the agouti signaling protein (Agouti). While variation in the Mc1r coding region does not correlate with melanism in any population, in a New Hampshire population, we find that a 125-kb deletion, which includes the upstream regulatory region and exons 1 and 2 of Agouti, results in a loss of Agouti expression and is perfectly associated with melanic color. In a second population from Alaska, we find that a premature stop codon in exon 3 of Agouti is associated with a similar melanic phenotype. These results show that melanism has evolved independently in these populations through mutations in the same gene, and suggest that melanism produced by mutations in genes other than Mc1r may be more common than previously thought.
识别独立进化的表型的分子基础,可以深入了解遗传和发育限制影响表型多样性维持的方式。哺乳动物的黑化(深色色素沉着)表型提供了一个强有力的系统,用于研究自然发生的突变表型的遗传基础,因为黑化现象在许多哺乳动物中都有出现,并且哺乳动物的色素沉着途径已得到充分了解。已知一些关键色素沉着位点的自发等位基因会导致家养或实验室哺乳动物群体出现黑化现象,但在自然种群中,绝大多数情况下,一个基因——黑皮质素-1受体(Mc1r)的突变被认为与之相关,这可能是由于其多效性效应最小。为了研究该基因或其他基因的突变是否会在野外导致黑化现象,我们调查了鹿鼠属(Peromyscus)啮齿动物黑化现象的遗传基础,在该属的几个种群中都有黑化小鼠的报道。我们重点研究了两个已知会在其他分类群中导致黑化现象的基因,即Mc1r及其拮抗剂刺鼠信号蛋白(Agouti)。虽然Mc1r编码区的变异在任何种群中都与黑化现象无关,但在新罕布什尔州的一个种群中,我们发现一个125千碱基的缺失,该缺失包括Agouti的上游调控区以及外显子1和2,导致Agouti表达缺失,并且与黑色体色完全相关。在阿拉斯加的第二个种群中,我们发现Agouti外显子3中的一个提前终止密码子与类似的黑化表型相关。这些结果表明,黑化现象在这些种群中是通过同一基因的突变独立进化而来的,并且表明由Mc1r以外的基因突变产生的黑化现象可能比之前认为的更为普遍。