Seafood Research Unit, Plant and Food Research Limited, Nelson, New Zealand.
Mol Ecol. 2017 Nov;26(22):6185-6188. doi: 10.1111/mec.14406.
Animals display incredibly diverse colour patterns, a testament to evolution's endless innovation in shaping life. In many species, the interplay between males and females in the pursuit of mates has driven the evolution of a myriad of colour forms, from the flashy peacock tail feathers to the tiniest colour markings in damselflies. In others, colour provides crypsis by allowing to blend into the background and to escape the eyes of predators. While the obvious benefits of this dazzling diversity for reproduction and survival seem straightforward, its maintenance is not. Theory predicts that genetic drift and various forms of selection reduce variation over time, making the persistence of colour variants over generations a puzzle. In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Lindtke et al. () study the cryptic colour morphs of Timema cristinae walking sticks to shed light on the genetic architecture and mechanisms that allow colour polymorphism maintenance over long timescales. By combining genome-wide data with phenotyping information from natural populations, they were able to map the green and melanistic colour to one genomic region with highly reduced effective recombination rate between two main chromosomal variants, consistent with an inversion polymorphism. These two main chromosomal variants showed geographically widespread heterozygote excess, and genomic signatures consistent with long-term balancing selection. A younger chromosomal variant was detected for the third morph, the green-striped colour morphs, in the same genomic regions as the melanistic and the green-unstriped morphs. Together, these results suggest that the genetic architecture of cryptic T. cristinae morphs is caused by nonrecombining genomic blocks that have been maintained over extended time periods by balancing selection making this study one of the few available empirical examples documenting that balancing selection of various forms may play an important role in maintaining adaptive genetic variation in nature.
动物展现出令人难以置信的多样化色彩模式,证明了进化在塑造生命方面的无穷创新。在许多物种中,雄性和雌性在求偶过程中的相互作用推动了无数色彩形式的进化,从绚丽的孔雀尾羽到蜻蜓身上最小的色彩斑纹。在其他物种中,色彩通过与背景融为一体和躲避捕食者的眼睛提供了伪装。虽然这种令人眼花缭乱的多样性对繁殖和生存的明显好处似乎显而易见,但它的维持却并非如此。理论预测,遗传漂变和各种形式的选择会随着时间的推移减少变异,使得颜色变体在几代人中的持续存在成为一个谜。在本期《分子生态学》中,Lindtke 等人研究了 Timema cristinae 步行棒的隐蔽色变体,以揭示允许颜色多态性长期维持的遗传结构和机制。通过将全基因组数据与自然种群的表型信息相结合,他们能够将绿色和黑化颜色映射到一个基因组区域,该区域在两个主要染色体变体之间具有高度降低的有效重组率,与倒位多态性一致。这两个主要的染色体变体表现出广泛的地理上的杂合子过剩,并且具有与长期平衡选择一致的基因组特征。第三个形态,绿色条纹颜色形态的第三种染色体变体在与黑化和绿色非条纹形态相同的基因组区域中被检测到。总的来说,这些结果表明,隐蔽的 T. cristinae 形态的遗传结构是由非重组的基因组块引起的,这些基因组块通过平衡选择在很长一段时间内得以维持,这使得这项研究成为少数几个提供实证例子之一,证明各种形式的平衡选择可能在维持自然适应性遗传变异方面发挥重要作用。