Schmid Sarah, Neuenschwander Samuel, Pitteloud Camille, Heckel Gerald, Pajkovic Mila, Arlettaz Raphaël, Alvarez Nadir
Department of Ecology and Evolution University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland.
Vital-IT Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland.
Ecol Evol. 2017 Dec 29;8(3):1480-1495. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3699. eCollection 2018 Feb.
Analyzing genetic variation through time and space is important to identify key evolutionary and ecological processes in populations. However, using contemporary genetic data to infer the dynamics of genetic diversity may be at risk of a bias, as inferences are performed from a set of extant populations, setting aside unavailable, rare, or now extinct lineages. Here, we took advantage of new developments in next-generation sequencing to analyze the spatial and temporal genetic dynamics of the grasshopper , a steppic Southwestern-Palearctic species. We applied a recently developed hybridization capture (hyRAD) protocol that allows retrieving orthologous sequences even from degraded DNA characteristic of museum specimens. We identified single nucleotide polymorphisms in 68 historical and 51 modern samples in order to (i) unravel the spatial genetic structure across part of the species distribution and (ii) assess the loss of genetic diversity over the past century in Swiss populations. Our results revealed (i) the presence of three potential glacial refugia spread across the European continent and converging spatially in the Alpine area. In addition, and despite a limited population sample size, our results indicate (ii) a loss of allelic richness in contemporary Swiss populations compared to historical populations, whereas levels of expected heterozygosities were not significantly different. This observation is compatible with an increase in the bottleneck magnitude experienced by central European populations of following human-mediated land-use change impacting steppic habitats. Our results confirm that application of hyRAD to museum samples produces valuable information to study genetic processes across time and space.
通过时间和空间分析遗传变异对于识别种群中的关键进化和生态过程至关重要。然而,利用当代遗传数据推断遗传多样性的动态可能存在偏差风险,因为推断是从一组现存种群进行的,而忽略了无法获得、罕见或现已灭绝的谱系。在这里,我们利用下一代测序的新进展来分析一种西南古北区草原蝗虫的时空遗传动态。我们应用了最近开发的杂交捕获(hyRAD)方案,该方案甚至可以从博物馆标本特有的降解DNA中检索直系同源序列。我们在68个历史样本和51个现代样本中鉴定了单核苷酸多态性,以便(i)揭示该物种分布部分地区的空间遗传结构,以及(ii)评估瑞士种群在过去一个世纪中遗传多样性的丧失。我们的结果显示(i)在欧洲大陆分布着三个潜在的冰川避难所,在阿尔卑斯地区在空间上汇聚。此外,尽管种群样本量有限,但我们的结果表明(ii)与历史种群相比,当代瑞士种群的等位基因丰富度有所丧失,而预期杂合度水平没有显著差异。这一观察结果与中欧种群在人类介导的土地利用变化影响草原栖息地后经历的瓶颈强度增加相一致。我们的结果证实,将hyRAD应用于博物馆样本可为研究时空遗传过程提供有价值的信息。