Stuart Katarina C, Sherwin William B, Edwards Richard J, Rollins Lee A
Evolution & Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Evolution & Ecology Research Centre, School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Front Genet. 2023 Jan 4;13:1010456. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2022.1010456. eCollection 2022.
Two fundamental questions for evolutionary studies are the speed at which evolution occurs, and the way that this evolution may present itself within an organism's genome. Evolutionary studies on invasive populations are poised to tackle some of these pressing questions, including understanding the mechanisms behind rapid adaptation, and how it facilitates population persistence within a novel environment. Investigation of these questions are assisted through recent developments in experimental, sequencing, and analytical protocols; in particular, the growing accessibility of next generation sequencing has enabled a broader range of taxa to be characterised. In this perspective, we discuss recent genetic findings within the invasive European starlings in Australia, and outline some critical next steps within this research system. Further, we use discoveries within this study system to guide discussion of pressing future research directions more generally within the fields of population and evolutionary genetics, including the use of historic specimens, phenotypic data, non-SNP genetic variants (e.g., structural variants), and pan-genomes. In particular, we emphasise the need for exploratory genomics studies across a range of invasive taxa so we can begin understanding broad mechanisms that underpin rapid adaptation in these systems. Understanding how genetic diversity arises and is maintained in a population, and how this contributes to adaptability, requires a deep understanding of how evolution functions at the molecular level, and is of fundamental importance for the future studies and preservation of biodiversity across the globe.
进化研究的两个基本问题是进化发生的速度,以及这种进化在生物体基因组中呈现的方式。对入侵种群的进化研究准备解决其中一些紧迫问题,包括理解快速适应背后的机制,以及它如何促进种群在新环境中的持续存在。实验、测序和分析方法的最新进展有助于对这些问题的研究;特别是,新一代测序技术越来越容易获得,使得能够对更广泛的分类群进行特征描述。从这个角度出发,我们讨论了澳大利亚入侵的欧洲椋鸟最近的遗传学发现,并概述了该研究系统中的一些关键下一步。此外,我们利用这个研究系统中的发现,更广泛地指导种群和进化遗传学领域未来紧迫研究方向的讨论,包括历史标本、表型数据、非单核苷酸多态性遗传变异(如结构变异)和泛基因组的使用。特别是,我们强调需要对一系列入侵分类群进行探索性基因组学研究,以便我们能够开始理解支撑这些系统中快速适应的广泛机制。了解遗传多样性如何在种群中产生和维持,以及这如何促进适应性,需要深入理解进化在分子水平上的作用,这对于全球未来的生物多样性研究和保护至关重要。