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The genomic basis of adaptive evolution in threespine sticklebacks.

Authors :
Jones FC
Grabherr MG
Chan YF
Russell P
Mauceli E
Johnson J
Swofford R
Pirun M
Zody MC
White S
Birney E
Searle S
Schmutz J
Grimwood J
Dickson MC
Myers RM
Miller CT
Summers BR
Knecht AK
Brady SD
Zhang H
Pollen AA
Howes T
Amemiya C
Baldwin J
Bloom T
Jaffe DB
Nicol R
Wilkinson J
Lander ES
Di Palma F
Lindblad-Toh K
Kingsley DM
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2012 Apr 04; Vol. 484 (7392), pp. 55-61. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Apr 04.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Marine stickleback fish have colonized and adapted to thousands of streams and lakes formed since the last ice age, providing an exceptional opportunity to characterize genomic mechanisms underlying repeated ecological adaptation in nature. Here we develop a high-quality reference genome assembly for threespine sticklebacks. By sequencing the genomes of twenty additional individuals from a global set of marine and freshwater populations, we identify a genome-wide set of loci that are consistently associated with marine-freshwater divergence. Our results indicate that reuse of globally shared standing genetic variation, including chromosomal inversions, has an important role in repeated evolution of distinct marine and freshwater sticklebacks, and in the maintenance of divergent ecotypes during early stages of reproductive isolation. Both coding and regulatory changes occur in the set of loci underlying marine-freshwater evolution, but regulatory changes appear to predominate in this well known example of repeated adaptive evolution in nature.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
484
Issue :
7392
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22481358
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10944