Hohenlohe Paul A
Department of Biological Sciences, Institute for Bioinformatics and Evolutionary Studies, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, 83844, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2014 Nov;23(21):5129-31. doi: 10.1111/mec.12945.
Colour patterns in animals have long offered an opportunity to observe adaptive traits in natural populations. Colour plays myriad roles in interactions within and among species, from reproductive signalling to predator avoidance, leading to multiple targets of natural and sexual selection and opportunities for diversification. Understanding the genetic and developmental underpinnings of variation in colour promises a fuller understanding of these evolutionary processes, but the path to unravelling these connections can be arduous. The advent of genomic techniques suitable for nonmodel organisms is now beginning to light the way. Two new studies in this issue of Molecular Ecology use genomic sequencing of laboratory crosses to map colour traits in cichlid fishes, a remarkably diverse group in which coloration has played a major role in diversification. They illustrate how genomic approaches, specifically RAD sequencing, can rapidly identify both simple and more complex genetic variation underlying ecologically important traits. In the first, Henning et al. () detect a single locus that appears to control in a Mendelian fashion the presence of horizontal stripes, a trait that has evolved in numerous cichlid lineages. In the second, Albertson et al. () identify several genes and epistatic interactions affecting multiple colour traits, as well as a novel metric describing integration across colour traits. Albertson et al. () go further, by quantifying differential expression of parental alleles at a candidate locus and by relating differentiation among natural populations at mapped loci to trait divergence. Herein lies the promise of ecological genomics - efficiently integrating genetic mapping of phenotypes with population genomic data to both identify functional genes and unravel their evolutionary history. These studies offer guidance on how genomic techniques can be tailored to a research question or study system, and they also add to the growing body of empirical examples addressing basic questions about how ecologically important traits evolve in natural populations.
动物的颜色模式长期以来为观察自然种群中的适应性特征提供了契机。颜色在物种内部和物种之间的相互作用中发挥着无数作用,从生殖信号传递到躲避捕食者,从而导致自然选择和性选择的多个目标以及多样化的机会。了解颜色变异的遗传和发育基础有望更全面地理解这些进化过程,但揭示这些联系的道路可能很艰巨。适用于非模式生物的基因组技术的出现现在开始照亮这条道路。本期《分子生态学》中的两项新研究利用实验室杂交的基因组测序来绘制丽鱼科鱼类的颜色特征图谱,丽鱼科是一个非常多样化的类群,其中颜色在物种分化中发挥了重要作用。它们说明了基因组方法,特别是RAD测序,如何能够快速识别生态重要性状背后的简单和更复杂的遗传变异。在第一项研究中,亨宁等人()检测到一个单一基因座,该基因座似乎以孟德尔方式控制水平条纹的存在,这一性状在众多丽鱼科谱系中都有进化。在第二项研究中,阿尔伯森等人()鉴定了几个影响多种颜色特征的基因和上位性相互作用,以及一个描述颜色特征整合的新指标。阿尔伯森等人()更进一步,通过量化候选基因座上亲本等位基因的差异表达,并将映射基因座上自然种群之间的分化与性状差异联系起来。这就是生态基因组学的前景——有效地将表型的遗传图谱与种群基因组数据整合起来,以识别功能基因并揭示它们的进化历史。这些研究为如何根据研究问题或研究系统调整基因组技术提供了指导,它们还增加了越来越多的实证例子,这些例子解决了关于生态重要性状如何在自然种群中进化的基本问题。