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相互竞争的适应性特征维持了野生蟋蟀种群中的非适应性变异。

Competing adaptations maintain nonadaptive variation in a wild cricket population.

作者信息

Rayner Jack G, Eichenberger Franca, Bainbridge Jessica V A, Zhang Shangzhe, Zhang Xiao, Yusuf Leeban H, Balenger Susan, Gaggiotti Oscar E, Bailey Nathan W

机构信息

Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740.

Centre for Biological Diversity, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9TH, United Kingdom.

出版信息

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Aug 6;121(32):e2317879121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2317879121. Epub 2024 Aug 1.

Abstract

How emerging adaptive variants interact is an important factor in the evolution of wild populations, but the opportunity to empirically study this interaction is rare. We recently documented the emergence of an adaptive phenotype "curly-wing" in Hawaiian populations of field crickets (). Curly-wing inhibits males' ability to sing, protecting them from eavesdropping parasitoid flies (). Surprisingly, curly-wing co-occurs with similarly protective silent "flatwing" phenotypes in multiple populations, in which neither phenotype has spread to fixation. These two phenotypes are frequently coexpressed, but since either sufficiently reduces song amplitude to evade the fly, their coexpression confers no additional fitness benefit. Numerous "off-target" phenotypic changes are known to accompany flatwing, and we find that curly-wing, too, negatively impacts male courtship ability and affects mass and survival of females under lab conditions. We show through crosses and genomic and mRNA sequencing that curly-wing expression is associated with variation on a single autosome. In parallel analyses of flatwing, our results reinforce previous findings of X-linked single-locus inheritance. By combining insights into the genetic architecture of these alternative phenotypes with simulations and field observations, we show that the co-occurrence of these two adaptations impedes either from fixing, despite extreme fitness benefits, due to fitness epistasis. This co-occurrence of similar adaptive forms in the same populations might be more common than is generally considered and could be an important force inhibiting adaptive evolution in wild populations of sexually reproducing organisms.

摘要

新出现的适应性变异如何相互作用是野生种群进化的一个重要因素,但通过实证研究这种相互作用的机会却很少。我们最近记录了夏威夷田野蟋蟀种群中一种适应性表型“卷翅”的出现。卷翅会抑制雄性蟋蟀鸣叫的能力,保护它们不被窃听的寄生蝇发现。令人惊讶的是,在多个种群中,卷翅与同样具有保护作用的沉默“平翅”表型同时出现,且这两种表型都没有扩散至固定状态。这两种表型经常同时表达,但由于任何一种表型都能充分降低鸣叫幅度以躲避寄生蝇,它们的共同表达并没有带来额外的适应性优势。已知平翅会伴随许多“脱靶”的表型变化,我们发现卷翅在实验室条件下也会对雄性求偶能力产生负面影响,并影响雌性的体重和存活率。我们通过杂交以及基因组和mRNA测序表明,卷翅的表达与一条常染色体上的变异有关。在对平翅的平行分析中,我们的结果强化了之前关于X连锁单基因遗传的发现。通过将对这些替代表型的遗传结构的见解与模拟和野外观察相结合,我们表明,尽管这两种适应性变异具有极大的适应性优势,但由于适应性上位性,它们的同时出现阻碍了任何一种变异固定下来。在同一种群中,这些相似的适应性形式同时出现的情况可能比普遍认为的更为常见,并且可能是抑制有性繁殖生物野生种群适应性进化的一个重要因素。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/0558/11317585/09a47bb794d5/pnas.2317879121fig01.jpg

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