Tuttle Elaina M, Bergland Alan O, Korody Marisa L, Brewer Michael S, Newhouse Daniel J, Minx Patrick, Stager Maria, Betuel Adam, Cheviron Zachary A, Warren Wesley C, Gonser Rusty A, Balakrishnan Christopher N
Department of Biology and The Center for Genomic Advocacy, Indiana State University, 600 Chestnut Street, Terre Haute, IN 47809, USA.
Department of Biology, Stanford University, 371 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-5020, USA.
Curr Biol. 2016 Feb 8;26(3):344-50. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.11.069. Epub 2016 Jan 21.
A major challenge in biology is to understand the genetic basis of adaptation. One compelling idea is that groups of tightly linked genes (i.e., "supergenes" [1, 2]) facilitate adaptation in suites of traits that determine fitness. Despite their likely importance, little is known about how alternate supergene alleles arise and become differentiated, nor their ultimate fate within species. Herein we address these questions by investigating the evolutionary history of a supergene in white-throated sparrows, Zonotrichia albicollis. This species comprises two morphs, tan and white, that differ in pigmentation and components of social behavior [3-5]. Morph is determined by alternative alleles at a balanced >100-Mb inversion-based supergene, providing a unique system for studying gene-behavior relationships. Using over two decades of field data, we document near-perfect disassortative mating among morphs, as well as the fitness consequences of rare assortative mating. We use de novo whole-genome sequencing coupled with population- and phylogenomic data to show that alternate supergene alleles are highly divergent at over 1,000 genes and that these alleles originated prior to the split of Z. albicollis from its sister species and may be polymorphic in Z. albicollis due to a past hybridization event. We provide evidence that the "white" allele may be degrading, similar to neo-Y/W sex chromosomes. We further show that the "tan" allele has surprisingly low levels of genetic diversity yet does not show several canonical signatures of recurrent positive selection. We discuss these results in the context of the origin, molecular evolution, and possible fate of this remarkable polymorphism.
生物学中的一个重大挑战是理解适应的遗传基础。一个引人注目的观点是,紧密连锁的基因群(即“超级基因”[1,2])有助于在决定适应性的一系列性状中实现适应。尽管它们可能很重要,但对于替代超级基因等位基因是如何产生并分化的,以及它们在物种中的最终命运,我们知之甚少。在此,我们通过研究白喉带鹀(Zonotrichia albicollis)中一个超级基因的进化历史来解决这些问题。该物种包括两种形态,棕色和白色,它们在色素沉着和社会行为组成方面存在差异[3-5]。形态由一个基于平衡的大于100兆碱基倒位的超级基因的替代等位基因决定,为研究基因与行为的关系提供了一个独特的系统。利用二十多年的野外数据,我们记录了不同形态之间近乎完美的异交,以及罕见的同交的适应性后果。我们使用从头全基因组测序结合群体和系统基因组数据,表明替代超级基因等位基因在1000多个基因上高度分化,并且这些等位基因起源于白喉带鹀与其姐妹物种分化之前,可能由于过去的杂交事件而在白喉带鹀中呈多态性。我们提供证据表明,“白色”等位基因可能正在退化,类似于新的Y/W性染色体。我们进一步表明,“棕色”等位基因的遗传多样性水平出奇地低,但没有显示出反复正选择的几个典型特征。我们在这种显著多态性的起源、分子进化和可能命运的背景下讨论了这些结果。