Kapun M, Schmidt C, Durmaz E, Schmidt P S, Flatt T
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2016 May;29(5):1059-72. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12847. Epub 2016 Mar 2.
Chromosomal inversions are thought to play a major role in climatic adaptation. In D. melanogaster, the cosmopolitan inversion In(3R)Payne exhibits latitudinal clines on multiple continents. As many fitness traits show similar clines, it is tempting to hypothesize that In(3R)P underlies observed clinal patterns for some of these traits. In support of this idea, previous work in Australian populations has demonstrated that In(3R)P affects body size but not development time or cold resistance. However, similar data from other clines of this inversion are largely lacking; finding parallel effects of In(3R)P across multiple clines would considerably strengthen the case for clinal selection. Here, we have analysed the phenotypic effects of In(3R)P in populations originating from the endpoints of the latitudinal cline along the North American east coast. We measured development time, egg-to-adult survival, several size-related traits (femur and tibia length, wing area and shape), chill coma recovery, oxidative stress resistance and triglyceride content in homokaryon lines carrying In(3R)P or the standard arrangement. Our central finding is that the effects of In(3R)P along the North American cline match those observed in Australia: standard arrangement lines were larger than inverted lines, but the inversion did not influence development time or cold resistance. Similarly, In(3R)P did not affect egg-to-adult survival, oxidative stress resistance and lipid content. In(3R)P thus seems to specifically affect size traits in populations from both continents. This parallelism strongly suggests an adaptive pattern, whereby the inversion has captured alleles associated with growth regulation and clinal selection acts on size across both continents.
染色体倒位被认为在气候适应中起主要作用。在黑腹果蝇中,世界性倒位In(3R)Payne在多个大陆上呈现出纬度渐变群。由于许多适应性性状表现出相似的渐变群,因此很容易推测In(3R)P是其中一些性状观察到的渐变模式的基础。支持这一观点的是,先前对澳大利亚种群的研究表明,In(3R)P影响体型,但不影响发育时间或耐寒性。然而,关于这种倒位的其他渐变群的类似数据在很大程度上是缺乏的;在多个渐变群中发现In(3R)P的平行效应将大大加强渐变选择的证据。在这里,我们分析了In(3R)P在源自北美东海岸纬度渐变群端点的种群中的表型效应。我们测量了携带In(3R)P或标准排列的同核系的发育时间、卵到成虫的存活率、几个与大小相关的性状(股骨和胫骨长度、翅面积和形状)、冷昏迷恢复、抗氧化应激能力和甘油三酯含量。我们的主要发现是,In(3R)P在北美渐变群中的效应与在澳大利亚观察到的效应相匹配:标准排列系比倒位系体型更大,但倒位不影响发育时间或耐寒性。同样,In(3R)P不影响卵到成虫的存活率、抗氧化应激能力和脂质含量。因此,In(3R)P似乎特别影响来自两个大陆种群的大小性状。这种平行性强烈表明了一种适应性模式,即倒位捕获了与生长调节相关的等位基因,并且渐变选择在两个大陆上对体型起作用。