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大批死亡的小褐蝙蝠显示出潜在的适应性变化。

Decimated little brown bats show potential for adaptive change.

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2020 Feb 20;10(1):3023. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-59797-4.

Abstract

The degree to which species can rapidly adapt is key to survival in the face of climatic and other anthropogenic changes. For little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus), whose populations have experienced declines of over 90% because of the introduced fungal pathogen that causes white-nose syndrome (WNS), survival of the species may ultimately depend upon its capacity for adaptive change. Here, we present evidence of selectively driven change (adaptation), despite dramatic nonadaptive genomic shifts (genetic drift) associated with population declines. We compared the genetic makeups of wild survivors versus non-survivors of WNS, and found significant shifts in allele frequencies of genes associated with regulating arousal from hibernation (GABARB1), breakdown of fats (cGMP-PK1), and vocalizations (FOXP2). Changes at these genes are suggestive of evolutionary adaptation, given that WNS causes bats to arouse with unusual frequency from hibernation, contributing to premature depletion of fat reserves. However, whether these putatively adaptive shifts in allele frequencies translate into sufficient increases in survival for the species to rebound in the face of WNS is unknown.

摘要

物种快速适应的程度是在面对气候和其他人为变化时生存的关键。对于由于白鼻综合征(WNS)而导致的传染性病原体而数量下降超过 90%的小褐蝙蝠(Myotis lucifugus)来说,物种的生存最终可能取决于其适应变化的能力。在这里,我们提出了尽管与种群下降相关的非适应性基因组变化(遗传漂变)很大,但存在选择性驱动变化(适应性)的证据。我们比较了 WNS 野生幸存者与非幸存者的基因构成,并发现与调节从冬眠中苏醒(GABARB1)、脂肪分解(cGMP-PK1)和发声(FOXP2)相关的基因的等位基因频率发生了显著变化。鉴于 WNS 导致蝙蝠从冬眠中异常频繁地苏醒,从而导致脂肪储备过早耗尽,这些基因的变化表明存在进化适应。然而,这些等位基因频率的潜在适应性变化是否足以使物种在面对 WNS 时增加足够的生存机会以反弹,尚不清楚。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ba73/7033193/c3439a5fbfb0/41598_2020_59797_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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