Section Ecology & Evolution, Amsterdam Institute for Life and Environment (A-LIFE), Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Mol Ecol. 2024 Jun;33(12):e17383. doi: 10.1111/mec.17383. Epub 2024 May 15.
Despite a long presence in the contiguous United States (US), the distribution of invasive wild pigs (Sus scrofa × domesticus) has expanded rapidly since the 1980s, suggesting a more recent evolutionary shift towards greater invasiveness. Contemporary populations of wild pigs represent exoferal hybrid descendants of domestic pigs and European wild boar, with such hybridization expected to enrich genetic diversity and increase the adaptive potential of populations. Our objective was to characterize how genetic enrichment through hybridization increases the invasiveness of populations by identifying signals of selection and the ancestral origins of selected loci. Our study focused on invasive wild pigs within Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which represents a hybrid population descendent from the admixture of established populations of feral pigs and an introduction of European wild boar to North America. Accordingly, we genotyped 881 wild pigs with multiple high-density single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays. We found 233 markers under putative selection spread over 79 regions across 16 out of 18 autosomes, which contained genes involved in traits affecting feralization. Among these, genes were found to be related to skull formation and neurogenesis, with two genes, TYRP1 and TYR, also encoding for crucial melanogenesis enzymes. The most common haplotypes associated with regions under selection for the Great Smoky Mountains population were also common among other populations throughout the region, indicating a key role of putatively selective variants in the fitness of invasive populations. Interestingly, many of these haplotypes were absent among European wild boar reference genotypes, indicating feralization through genetic adaptation.
尽管在毗邻的美国(美国)已经存在了很长时间,但自 20 世纪 80 年代以来,入侵的野猪(Sus scrofa × domesticus)的分布迅速扩大,这表明最近的进化趋势是更具侵略性。当代野猪种群代表了家猪和欧洲野猪的外群杂种后代,这种杂交有望丰富遗传多样性并增加种群的适应潜力。我们的目标是通过确定选择信号和选定基因座的祖先起源,来描述通过杂交产生的遗传丰富度如何增加种群的入侵性。我们的研究集中在大烟山国家公园内的入侵野猪上,这些野猪是由野猪和欧洲野猪引入北美的混合种群的后代。因此,我们对 881 头野猪进行了基因分型,这些野猪使用了多种高密度单核苷酸多态性(SNP)阵列。我们发现了 233 个可能受选择影响的标记,这些标记分布在 16 个常染色体中的 79 个区域,其中包含了影响驯化的性状相关的基因。其中,发现与头骨形成和神经发生有关的基因,TYRP1 和 TYR 这两个基因也编码关键的黑色素生成酶。与大烟山种群选择相关的最常见单倍型也在该地区的其他种群中很常见,这表明选择变体在入侵种群的适应性方面起着关键作用。有趣的是,这些单倍型中的许多在欧洲野猪的参考基因型中都不存在,这表明了通过遗传适应实现了驯化。