A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The Evolution and Adaptive Potential of Transcriptional Variation in Sticklebacks-Signatures of Selection and Widespread Heritability




AuthorsErica H. Leder, R.J. Scott McCairns, Tuomas Leinonen, José M. Cano, Heidi M. Viitaniemi, Mikko Nikinmaa, Craig R. Primmer, Juha Merilä

PublisherOXFORD UNIV PRESS

Publication year2015

JournalMolecular Biology and Evolution

Journal name in sourceMOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION

Journal acronymMOL BIOL EVOL

Volume32

Issue3

First page 674

Last page689

Number of pages16

ISSN0737-4038

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msu328


Abstract

Evidence implicating differential gene expression as a significant driver of evolutionary novelty continues to accumulate, but our understanding of the underlying sources of variation in expression, both environmental and genetic, is wanting. Heritability in particular may be underestimated when inferred from genetic mapping studies, the predominant "genetical genomics" approach to the study of expression variation. Such uncertainty represents a fundamental limitation to testing for adaptive evolution at the transcriptomic level. By studying the inheritance of expression levels in 10,495 genes (10,527 splice variants) in a threespine stickleback pedigree consisting of 563 individuals, half of which were subjected to a thermal treatment, we show that 74-98% of transcripts exhibit significant additive genetic variance. Dominance variance is also prevalent (41-99% of transcripts), and genetic sources of variation seem to play a more significant role in expression variance in the liver than a key environmental variable, temperature. Among-population comparisons suggest that the majority of differential expression in the liver is likely due to neutral divergence; however, we also show that signatures of directional selection may be more prevalent than those of stabilizing selection. This predominantly aligns with the neutral model of evolution for gene expression but also suggests that natural selection may still act on transcriptional variation in the wild. As genetic variation both within- and among-populations ultimately defines adaptive potential, these results indicate that broad adaptive potential may be found within the transcriptome.




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