Stahl Bethany A, Gross Joshua B
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.
J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol. 2017 Sep;328(6):515-532. doi: 10.1002/jez.b.22749. Epub 2017 Jun 14.
Organisms that are isolated into extreme environments often evolve extreme phenotypes. However, global patterns of dynamic gene expression changes that accompany dramatic environmental changes remain largely unknown. The blind Mexican cavefish, Astyanax mexicanus, has evolved a number of severe cave-associated phenotypes including loss of vision and pigmentation, craniofacial bone fusions, increased fat storage, reduced sleep, and amplified nonvisual sensory systems. Interestingly, surface-dwelling forms have repeatedly entered different caves throughout Mexico, providing a natural set of "replicate" instances of cave isolation. These surrogate "ancestral" surface-dwelling forms persist in nearby rivers, enabling direct comparisons to the "derived" cave-dwelling form. We evaluated changes associated with subterranean isolation by measuring differential gene expression in two geographically distinct cave-dwelling populations (Pachón and Tinaja). To understand the impact of these expression changes on development, we performed RNA-sequencing across four critical stages during which troglomorphic traits first appear in cavefish embryos. Gene ontology (GO) studies revealed similar functional profiles evolved in both independent cave lineages. However, enrichment studies indicated that similar GO profiles were occasionally mediated by different genes. Certain "master" regulators, such as Otx2 and Mitf, appear to be important loci for cave adaptation, as remarkably similar patterns of expression were identified in both independent cave lineages. This work reveals that adaptation to an extreme environment, in two distinct cavefish lineages, evolves through a combination of unique and shared gene expression patterns. Shared expression profiles reflect common environmental pressures, while unique expression likely reflects the fact that similar adaptive traits evolve through diverse genetic mechanisms.
被隔离到极端环境中的生物通常会进化出极端的表型。然而,伴随剧烈环境变化的动态基因表达变化的全球模式在很大程度上仍然未知。盲眼的墨西哥洞鲈(Astyanax mexicanus)已经进化出许多与洞穴相关的严重表型,包括视力和色素沉着丧失、颅面骨融合、脂肪储存增加、睡眠减少以及非视觉感官系统增强。有趣的是,生活在地表的形态多次进入墨西哥各地不同的洞穴,提供了一组自然的洞穴隔离“重复”实例。这些替代的“祖先”地表形态在附近的河流中持续存在,使得能够直接与“衍生”的洞穴形态进行比较。我们通过测量两个地理上不同的洞穴种群(帕琼和蒂纳哈)的差异基因表达来评估与地下隔离相关的变化。为了了解这些表达变化对发育的影响,我们在洞穴鱼胚胎首次出现洞穴形态特征的四个关键阶段进行了RNA测序。基因本体(GO)研究揭示了在两个独立的洞穴谱系中进化出的相似功能概况。然而,富集研究表明,相似的GO概况偶尔由不同的基因介导。某些“主”调节因子,如Otx2和Mitf,似乎是洞穴适应的重要位点,因为在两个独立的洞穴谱系中都发现了非常相似的表达模式。这项工作表明,在两个不同的洞穴鱼谱系中,对极端环境的适应是通过独特和共享的基因表达模式的组合来进化的。共享的表达概况反映了共同的环境压力,而独特的表达可能反映了相似的适应性状通过不同的遗传机制进化的事实。