Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY.
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
J Hered. 2021 May 24;112(3):229-240. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esab008.
Populations along steep environmental gradients are subject to differentiating selection that can result in local adaptation, despite countervailing gene flow, and genetic drift. In montane systems, where species are often restricted to narrow ranges of elevation, it is unclear whether the selection is strong enough to influence functional differentiation of subpopulations differing by a few hundred meters in elevation. We used targeted capture of 12 501 exons from across the genome, including 271 genes previously implicated in altitude adaptation, to test for adaptation to local elevations for 2 highland hummingbird species, Coeligena violifer (n = 62) and Colibri coruscans (n = 101). For each species, we described population genetic structure across the complex geography of the Peruvian Andes and, while accounting for this structure, we tested whether elevational allele frequency clines in single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) showed evidence for local adaptation to elevation. Although the 2 species exhibited contrasting population genetic structures, we found signatures of clinal genetic variation with shifts in elevation in both. The genes with SNP-elevation associations included candidate genes previously discovered for high-elevation adaptation as well as others not previously identified, with cellular functions related to hypoxia response, energy metabolism, and immune function, among others. Despite the homogenizing effects of gene flow and genetic drift, natural selection on parts of the genome evidently optimizes elevation-specific cellular function even within elevation range-restricted montane populations. Consequently, our results suggest local adaptation occurring in narrow elevation bands in tropical mountains, such as the Andes, may effectively make them "taller" biogeographic barriers.
在陡峭的环境梯度上,种群会受到选择作用的影响,即使存在基因流和遗传漂变的抵消作用,也可能导致局部适应。在山地系统中,物种通常局限于狭窄的海拔范围内,因此不清楚选择是否足够强烈,以至于影响到仅在几百米海拔高度上存在差异的亚种群的功能分化。我们使用靶向捕获 12501 个基因组外显子,包括之前与海拔适应相关的 271 个基因,以测试 2 种高地蜂鸟(Coeligena violifer,n=62)和 Colibri coruscans(n=101)对当地海拔的适应。对于每个物种,我们描述了在秘鲁安第斯山脉复杂地形上的种群遗传结构,并且在考虑到这种结构的情况下,我们测试了单核苷酸多态性(SNP)的海拔等位基因频率渐变是否有证据表明对海拔的局部适应。尽管这 2 个物种表现出相反的种群遗传结构,但我们发现了两者都存在与海拔变化相关的遗传渐变的迹象。具有 SNP-海拔关联的基因包括先前发现的高海拔适应的候选基因,以及其他以前未发现的基因,具有与缺氧反应、能量代谢和免疫功能等相关的细胞功能。尽管基因流和遗传漂变具有同质化作用,但对基因组部分的自然选择显然使海拔特异性的细胞功能得到了优化,即使在海拔范围受限的山地种群中也是如此。因此,我们的结果表明,在热带山脉(如安第斯山脉)狭窄的海拔带中可能发生局部适应,这可能有效地使它们成为“更高”的生物地理屏障。