Teasing apart the joint effect of demography and natural selection in the birth of a contact zone

Lili Li, P. Milesi, M. Tiret, Jun Chen, Janek Sendrowski, John Baison, Zhiqiang Chen, Linghua Zhou, B. Karlsson, M. Berlin, J. Westin, Rosario Garcia-Gil, Harry X. Wu, M. Lascoux
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Vast population movements induced by recurrent climatic cycles have shaped the genetic structure of plant species. This is especially true in Scandinavia that was repeatedly glaciated. During glacial periods trees were confined to refugia, south and east of the ice sheet, from which they recolonized Scandinavia as the ice melted away. This multi-pronged recolonization led to large contact zones in most species. We leverage large genomic data from 5000 trees to reconstruct the demographic history of Norway spruce (Picea abies) and test for the presence of natural selection during the recolonization process and the establishment of the contact zone. Sweden is today made up of two large genetic clusters, a southern one originating from the Baltics and a Northern one originating from Northern Russia. The contact zone delineating these two clusters closely matches the limit between two major climatic regions. This suggests that natural selection contributed to the establishment and the maintenance of the contact zone. To test this hypothesis we first used Approximate Bayesian Computation; an Isolation-with migration model with genome-wide linked selection fits the data better than a purely neutral one. Secondly, we identified loci characterized by both extreme allele frequency differences between geographic regions and association to the variables defining the climatic zones. These loci, many of which are related to phenology, form clusters present on all linkage groups. Altogether, the current genetic structure reflects the joint effect of climatic cycles, recolonization and selection on the establishment of strong local adaptation and contact zones. Significance Statement Understanding how past climatic events, human actions and evolutionary forces contributed to the present distribution of genetic diversity is crucial to predict their reaction to the current climate crisis. Vast distribution shifts induced by past environmental changes, local ecological processes, natural selection and human transfers contributed to the current distribution of Norway spruce across Northern Europe. Genome-wide polymorphisms from thousands of individuals show that Scandinavia was recolonized after the Last Glacial from both south and north. This two-pronged recolonization established a contact zone between two genetic clusters that matches the limit between two major climate zones. The contact zone is shaped and maintained by natural selection on a large number of loci that form blocks of co-adapted loci spread genome-wide.
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梳理了接触区诞生过程中人口统计学和自然选择的共同作用
由反复的气候周期引起的大规模人口流动塑造了植物物种的遗传结构。在反复被冰川覆盖的斯堪的纳维亚半岛尤其如此。在冰河时期,树木被限制在冰盖的南部和东部的避难所,随着冰的融化,它们重新占领了斯堪的纳维亚半岛。这种多管齐下的再定居导致了大多数物种的大面积接触区。我们利用来自5000棵树的大量基因组数据来重建挪威云杉(Picea abies)的人口统计学历史,并测试在重新殖民过程和接触区建立过程中自然选择的存在。今天的瑞典由两个大的基因群组成,南部的一个来自波罗的海,北部的一个来自俄罗斯北部。划定这两个集群的接触带与两个主要气候区域之间的界限密切匹配。这表明自然选择促成了接触带的建立和维持。为了验证这个假设,我们首先使用了近似贝叶斯计算;具有全基因组连锁选择的隔离-迁移模型比纯粹中性的模型更符合数据。其次,我们确定了具有地理区域之间极端等位基因频率差异和与定义气候带变量相关的基因座。这些位点,其中许多与物候有关,在所有连锁群上形成集群。总的来说,目前的遗传结构反映了气候周期、再殖民化和选择对建立强大的局部适应和接触带的共同作用。了解过去的气候事件、人类活动和进化力量如何影响遗传多样性的当前分布,对于预测它们对当前气候危机的反应至关重要。过去的环境变化、当地生态过程、自然选择和人类迁移导致了挪威云杉在北欧的广泛分布。来自数千个个体的全基因组多态性表明,斯堪的纳维亚半岛在末次冰期后被来自南方和北方的人重新殖民。这种双管齐下的再殖民在两个基因群之间建立了一个接触区,与两个主要气候带之间的界限相匹配。接触区是通过自然选择在大量的基因座上形成和维持的,这些基因座形成了全基因组范围内传播的共适应基因座块。
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