生物
基因座(遗传学)
基因流
局部适应
等位基因
进化生物学
横断面
遗传学
基因型
遗传变异
基因
生态学
人口
人口学
社会学
作者
Susanne P. Pfeifer,Stefan Laurent,Vítor C. Sousa,Catherine R. Linnen,Matthieu Foll,Laurent Excoffier,Hopi E. Hoekstra,Jeffrey D. Jensen
标识
DOI:10.1093/molbev/msy004
摘要
The interplay of gene flow, genetic drift, and local selective pressure is a dynamic process that has been well studied from a theoretical perspective over the last century. Wright and Haldane laid the foundation for expectations under an island-continent model, demonstrating that an island-specific beneficial allele may be maintained locally if the selection coefficient is larger than the rate of migration of the ancestral allele from the continent. Subsequent extensions of this model have provided considerably more insight. Yet, connecting theoretical results with empirical data has proven challenging, owing to a lack of information on the relationship between genotype, phenotype, and fitness. Here, we examine the demographic and selective history of deer mice in and around the Nebraska Sand Hills, a system in which variation at the Agouti locus affects cryptic coloration that in turn affects the survival of mice in their local habitat. We first genotyped 250 individuals from 11 sites along a transect spanning the Sand Hills at 660,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms across the genome. Using these genomic data, we found that deer mice first colonized the Sand Hills following the last glacial period. Subsequent high rates of gene flow have served to homogenize the majority of the genome between populations on and off the Sand Hills, with the exception of the Agouti pigmentation locus. Furthermore, mutations at this locus are strongly associated with the pigment traits that are strongly correlated with local soil coloration and thus responsible for cryptic coloration.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI