Institute of Biology, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 2, A-8010, Graz, Austria.
Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18A, 75236, Uppsala, Sweden.
BMC Evol Biol. 2019 Jul 24;19(1):150. doi: 10.1186/s12862-019-1483-3.
Understanding how variation in gene expression contributes to morphological diversity is a major goal in evolutionary biology. Cichlid fishes from the East African Great lakes exhibit striking diversity in trophic adaptations predicated on the functional modularity of their two sets of jaws (oral and pharyngeal). However, the transcriptional basis of this modularity is not so well understood, as no studies thus far have directly compared the expression of genes in the oral and pharyngeal jaws. Nor is it well understood how gene expression may have contributed to the parallel evolution of trophic morphologies across the replicate cichlid adaptive radiations in Lake Tanganyika, Malawi and Victoria.
We set out to investigate the role of gene expression divergence in cichlid fishes from these three lakes adapted to herbivorous and carnivorous trophic niches. We focused on the development stage prior to the onset of exogenous feeding that is critical for understanding patterns of gene expression after oral and pharyngeal jaw skeletogenesis, anticipating environmental cues. This framework permitted us for the first time to test for signatures of gene expression underlying jaw modularity in convergent eco-morphologies across three independent adaptive radiations. We validated a set of reference genes, with stable expression between the two jaw types and across species, which can be important for future studies of gene expression in cichlid jaws. Next we found evidence of modular and non-modular gene expression between the two jaws, across different trophic niches and lakes. For instance, prdm1a, a skeletogenic gene with modular anterior-posterior expression, displayed higher pharyngeal jaw expression and modular expression pattern only in carnivorous species. Furthermore, we found the expression of genes in cichlids jaws from the youngest Lake Victoria to exhibit low modularity compared to the older lakes.
Overall, our results provide cross-species transcriptional comparisons of modularly-regulated skeletogenic genes in the two jaw types, implicating expression differences which might contribute to the formation of divergent trophic morphologies at the stage of larval independence prior to foraging.
了解基因表达的变化如何导致形态多样性是进化生物学的主要目标。东非大湖的丽鱼科鱼类在摄食适应方面表现出惊人的多样性,这是基于它们两套颚(口腔和咽)的功能模块化。然而,这种模块化的转录基础还不是很清楚,因为迄今为止还没有研究直接比较口腔和咽颚中基因的表达。也不清楚基因表达如何促成坦噶尼喀湖、马拉维和维多利亚湖重复丽鱼适应性辐射中摄食形态的平行进化。
我们着手研究基因表达分歧在这三个适应草食性和肉食性营养位的湖中的丽鱼中的作用。我们专注于开始外源性摄食之前的发育阶段,这对于理解口腔和咽颚骨骼形成后的基因表达模式至关重要,因为这可以预测环境线索。这个框架使我们首次能够在三个独立的适应性辐射中测试具有趋同生态形态的颌骨模块化的基因表达特征。我们验证了一组参考基因,这些基因在两种颌骨类型和不同物种之间的表达稳定,这对于未来的丽鱼颌骨基因表达研究可能很重要。接下来,我们发现了两种颌骨之间存在的模块化和非模块化基因表达证据,涉及不同的营养位和湖泊。例如,prdm1a 是一种具有模块化前-后表达的骨骼形成基因,在肉食性物种中表现出更高的咽颚表达和模块化表达模式。此外,我们发现来自年轻的维多利亚湖的丽鱼颌骨中的基因表达与较老的湖泊相比表现出较低的模块化。
总的来说,我们的结果提供了两种颌骨类型中模块化调节的骨骼形成基因的跨物种转录比较,表明表达差异可能有助于在独立觅食前的幼虫阶段形成不同的摄食形态。