The genetic architecture of temperature adaptation is shaped by population ancestry and not by selection regime

Abstract Background Understanding the genetic architecture of temperature adaptation is key for characterizing and predicting the effect of climate change on natural populations. One particularly promising approach is Evolve and Resequence, which combines advantages of experimental evolution such as...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kathrin A. Otte, Viola Nolte, François Mallard, Christian Schlötterer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Genome Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-021-02425-9
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Summary:Abstract Background Understanding the genetic architecture of temperature adaptation is key for characterizing and predicting the effect of climate change on natural populations. One particularly promising approach is Evolve and Resequence, which combines advantages of experimental evolution such as time series, replicate populations, and controlled environmental conditions, with whole genome sequencing. Recent analysis of replicate populations from two different Drosophila simulans founder populations, which were adapting to the same novel hot environment, uncovered very different architectures—either many selection targets with large heterogeneity among replicates or fewer selection targets with a consistent response among replicates. Results Here, we expose the founder population from Portugal to a cold temperature regime. Although almost no selection targets are shared between the hot and cold selection regime, the adaptive architecture was similar. We identify a moderate number of targets under strong selection (19 selection targets, mean selection coefficient = 0.072) and parallel responses in the cold evolved replicates. This similarity across different environments indicates that the adaptive architecture depends more on the ancestry of the founder population than the specific selection regime. Conclusions These observations will have broad implications for the correct interpretation of the genomic responses to a changing climate in natural populations.
ISSN:1474-760X