Berardi Skyler, Rhodes Jessica A, Berner Mary Catherine, Greenblum Sharon I, Bitter Mark C, Behrman Emily L, Betancourt Nicolas J, Bergland Alan O, Petrov Dmitri A, Rajpurohit Subhash, Schmidt Paul
bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 10:2024.08.09.607378. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.09.607378.
Populations are capable of responding to environmental change over ecological timescales via adaptive tracking. However, the translation from patterns of allele frequency change to rapid adaptation of complex traits remains unresolved. We used abdominal pigmentation in as a model phenotype to address the nature, genetic architecture, and repeatability of rapid adaptation in the field. We show that pigmentation evolves as a highly parallel and deterministic response to shared environmental gradients across latitude and season in natural North American populations. We then experimentally evolved replicate, genetically diverse fly populations in field mesocosms to remove any confounding effects of demography and/or cryptic structure that may drive patterns in wild populations; we show that pigmentation rapidly responds, in parallel, in fewer than ten generations. Thus, pigmentation evolves concordantly in response to spatial and temporal climatic gradients. We next examined whether phenotypic differentiation was associated with allele frequency change at loci with established links to genetic variance in pigmentation in natural populations. We found that across all spatial and temporal scales, phenotypic patterns were associated with variation at pigmentation-related loci, and the sets of genes we identified in each context were largely nonoverlapping. Therefore, our findings suggest that parallel phenotypic evolution is associated with an unpredictable genomic response, with distinct components of the polygenic architecture shifting across each environmental gradient to produce redundant adaptive patterns.
Shifts in global climate conditions have heightened our need to understand the dynamics and pace of adaptation in natural populations. In order to anticipate the population-level response to rapidly changing environmental conditions, we need to understand whether trait evolution is predictable over short timescales, and whether the genetic basis of adaptation is shared or distinct across multiple timescales. Here, we explored parallelism in the adaptive response of a complex phenotype, pigmentation, to shared conditions that varied over multiple spatiotemporal scales. Our results demonstrate that while phenotypic adaptation proceeds as a predictable response to environmental gradients, even over short timescales, the genetic basis of the adaptive response is variable and nuanced across spatial and temporal contexts.
种群能够通过适应性追踪在生态时间尺度上对环境变化做出响应。然而,从等位基因频率变化模式到复杂性状快速适应的转化仍未得到解决。我们将腹部色素沉着作为一种模型表型,以探讨野外快速适应的本质、遗传结构和可重复性。我们发现,在北美自然种群中,色素沉着作为对纬度和季节共享环境梯度的高度平行且确定性的响应而进化。然后,我们在野外中型生态箱中对具有遗传多样性的果蝇种群进行实验性进化,以消除可能驱动野生种群模式的人口统计学和/或隐秘结构的任何混杂影响;我们发现色素沉着在不到十代的时间内迅速且平行地做出响应。因此,色素沉着响应空间和时间气候梯度而协同进化。接下来,我们研究了表型分化是否与自然种群中与色素沉着遗传变异有既定联系的位点上的等位基因频率变化相关。我们发现,在所有空间和时间尺度上,表型模式与色素沉着相关位点的变异相关,并且我们在每种情况下鉴定出的基因集在很大程度上不重叠。因此,我们的研究结果表明,平行表型进化与不可预测的基因组反应相关,多基因结构的不同组成部分在每个环境梯度上发生变化,以产生冗余的适应模式。
全球气候条件的变化增加了我们理解自然种群适应动态和速度的需求。为了预测种群对快速变化的环境条件的反应,我们需要了解性状进化在短时间尺度上是否可预测,以及适应的遗传基础在多个时间尺度上是共享的还是不同的。在这里,我们探索了复杂表型——色素沉着对在多个时空尺度上变化的共享条件的适应性反应中的平行性。我们的结果表明,虽然表型适应作为对环境梯度的可预测反应而进行,即使在短时间尺度上也是如此,但适应反应的遗传基础在空间和时间背景下是可变且细微的。