生物
适应(眼睛)
阿莱夫
基因
进化生物学
人口
适应
转录组
遗传学
局部适应
渗透调节
生态学
盐度
基因表达
社会学
人口学
神经科学
捕食
作者
Jonathan P. Velotta,Jill L. Wegrzyn,Samuel Ginzburg,Lin Kang,Sergiusz J. Czesny,Rachel J. O’Neill,Stephen D. McCormick,Pawel Michalak,Eric T. Schultz
摘要
Abstract Comparative approaches in physiological genomics offer an opportunity to understand the functional importance of genes involved in niche exploitation. We used populations of Alewife ( Alosa pseudoharengus ) to explore the transcriptional mechanisms that underlie adaptation to fresh water. Ancestrally anadromous Alewives have recently formed multiple, independently derived, landlocked populations, which exhibit reduced tolerance of saltwater and enhanced tolerance of fresh water. Using RNA ‐seq, we compared transcriptional responses of an anadromous Alewife population to two landlocked populations after acclimation to fresh (0 ppt) and saltwater (35 ppt). Our results suggest that the gill transcriptome has evolved in primarily discordant ways between independent landlocked populations and their anadromous ancestor. By contrast, evolved shifts in the transcription of a small suite of well‐characterized osmoregulatory genes exhibited a strong degree of parallelism. In particular, transcription of genes that regulate gill ion exchange has diverged in accordance with functional predictions: freshwater ion‐uptake genes (most notably, the ‘freshwater paralog’ of Na + /K + ‐ ATP ase α‐subunit) were more highly expressed in landlocked forms, whereas genes that regulate saltwater ion secretion (e.g. the ‘saltwater paralog’ of NKA α) exhibited a blunted response to saltwater. Parallel divergence of ion transport gene expression is associated with shifts in salinity tolerance limits among landlocked forms, suggesting that changes to the gill's transcriptional response to salinity facilitate freshwater adaptation.
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