Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 24;8(7):e69402. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069402. Print 2013.
Northern freshwater fish may be suitable for the genetic dissection of ecological traits because they invaded new habitats after the last ice age (∼10.000 years ago). Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) colonizing streams and lakes in Iceland gave rise to multiple populations of small benthic morphotypes, often in sympatry with a pelagic morphotype. Earlier studies have revealed significant, but subtle, genetic differentiation between the three most common morphs in Lake Thingvallavatn. We conducted a population genetic screen on four immunological candidate genes Cathelicidin 2 (Cath2), Hepcidin (Hamp), Liver expressed antimicrobial peptide 2a (Leap-2a), and Major Histocompatibility Complex IIα (MHCIIα) and a mitochondrial marker (D-loop) among the three most common Lake Thingvallavatn charr morphs. Significant differences in allele frequencies were found between morphs at the Cath2 and MHCIIα loci. No such signal was detected in the D-loop nor in the other two immunological genes. In Cath2 the small benthic morph deviated from the other two (FST = 0.13), one of the substitutions detected constituting an amino acid replacement polymorphism in the antimicrobial peptide. A more striking difference was found in the MHCIIα. Two haplotypes were very common in the lake, and their frequency differed greatly between the morphotypes (from 22% to 93.5%, FST = 0.67). We then expanded our study by surveying the variation in Cath2 and MHCIIα in 9 Arctic charr populations from around Iceland. The populations varied greatly in terms of allele frequencies at Cath2, but the variation did not correlate with morphotype. At the MHCIIα locus, the variation was nearly identical to the variation in the two benthic morphs of Lake Thingvallavatn. The results are consistent with a scenario where parts of the immune systems have diverged substantially among Arctic charr populations in Iceland, after colonizing the island ∼10.000 years ago.
北方淡水鱼类可能适合进行生态特征的遗传分析,因为它们是在上一个冰河时代(约 10000 年前)后入侵新栖息地的。在冰岛,北极红点鲑(Salvelinus alpinus)入侵溪流和湖泊,形成了多个小型底栖形态的种群,这些种群常常与一个浮游形态共存。早期的研究表明,在 Thingvallavatn 湖中最常见的三个形态之间存在显著但微妙的遗传分化。我们在 Lake Thingvallavatn 的三个最常见的红点鲑形态中,对四个免疫候选基因(Cathelicidin 2(Cath2)、Hepcidin(Hamp)、Liver expressed antimicrobial peptide 2a(Leap-2a)和 Major Histocompatibility Complex IIα(MHCIIα))和一个线粒体标记(D-loop)进行了种群遗传筛选。在 Cath2 和 MHCIIα 基因座上,不同形态的等位基因频率存在显著差异。在 D-loop 或其他两个免疫基因中没有检测到这种信号。在 Cath2 中,小型底栖形态与其他两个形态不同(FST = 0.13),检测到的一个替换构成了抗菌肽中的一个氨基酸替换多态性。在 MHCIIα 中发现了一个更为显著的差异。两个单倍型在湖中非常常见,它们在形态类型之间的频率差异很大(从 22%到 93.5%,FST = 0.67)。然后,我们通过调查冰岛周围 9 个北极红点鲑种群中 Cath2 和 MHCIIα 的变异,扩展了我们的研究。在 Cath2 等位基因频率方面,这些种群差异很大,但这种变异与形态类型无关。在 MHCIIα 基因座上,变异与 Thingvallavatn 湖的两个底栖形态的变异几乎相同。结果与一个假设一致,即在大约 10000 年前,北极红点鲑在冰岛定居后,免疫系统的某些部分在冰岛的北极红点鲑种群中发生了很大的分歧。