Lopez Lua, Lang Patricia L M, Marciniak Stephanie, Kistler Logan, Latorre Sergio M, Haile Asnake, Cerda Eleanna Vasquez, Gamba Diana, Xu Yuxing, Woods Patrick, Yifru Mistire, Kerby Jeffrey, McKay John K, Oakley Christopher G, Ågren Jon, Wondimu Tigist, Bulafu Collins, Perry George H, Burbano Hernán A, Lasky Jesse R
Department of Biology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Department of Biology, California State University, San Bernardino, San Bernardino, CA, USA.
bioRxiv. 2025 Feb 7:2025.02.06.636844. doi: 10.1101/2025.02.06.636844.
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, environmental change (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.
随着时间推移的全球种群遗传变异模式为了解维持多样性的进化过程提供了一个窗口。随着时间的推移,谱系可能会扩大或缩小其分布范围,导致种群遗传组成发生更替。在单个基因座上,迁移、漂变、环境变化(以及其他过程)可能会影响等位基因频率。广泛分布物种的博物馆标本为研究不足的种群的遗传学以及随时间的变化提供了一个独特的窗口。在这里,我们对130份标本馆标本和91份新的野外采集样本的基因组进行了测序,并将这些数据与已发表的基因组相结合。我们寻求对该物种的基因组多样性有更广泛的了解,并测试种群基因组组成是否随时间发生变化。我们记录了非洲一系列种群中广泛存在且以前未被描述的多样性,这些种群正受到人为气候变化的威胁。随着时间的推移,我们没有发现种群基因组组成发生巨大变化。相反,我们发现每100年的遗传变化模式与相距185公里的欧亚种群之间的遗传变化模式幅度相同,这可能是由于漂变和选择变化共同作用的结果。我们在物候和生理数量性状基因座上仅发现了多基因适应的混合信号。我们确实发现,在真双子叶植物中保守的基因显示出定向等位基因频率变化水平的改变,这可能是由于可变的纯化选择和背景选择所致。我们的研究强调了标本馆标本如何能够揭示种群多样性的新维度,并展示了野生种群在近代历史中的进化方式。