Literature DB >> 21733895

Common mechanism underlies repeated evolution of extreme pollution tolerance.

Andrew Whitehead1, Whitney Pilcher, Denise Champlin, Diane Nacci.   

Abstract

Human alterations to the environment can exert strong evolutionary pressures, yet contemporary adaptation to human-mediated stressors is rarely documented in wildlife populations. A common-garden experimental design was coupled with comparative transcriptomics to discover evolved mechanisms enabling three populations of killifish resident in urban estuaries to survive normally lethal pollution exposure during development, and to test whether mechanisms are unique or common across populations. We show that killifish populations from these polluted sites have independently converged on a common adaptive mechanism, despite variation in contaminant profiles among sites. These populations are united by a similarly profound desensitization of aryl-hydrocarbon receptor-mediated transcriptional activation, which is associated with extreme tolerance to the lethal effects of toxic dioxin-like pollutants. The rapid, repeated, heritable and convergent nature of evolved tolerance suggests that ancestral killifish populations harboured genotypes that enabled adaptation to twentieth-century industrial pollutants.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21733895      PMCID: PMC3234547          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.0847

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  35 in total

1.  Physicochemical differences in the AH receptors of the most TCDD-susceptible and the most TCDD-resistant rat strains.

Authors:  R Pohjanvirta; M Viluksela; J T Tuomisto; M Unkila; J Karasinska; M A Franc; M Holowenko; J V Giannone; P A Harper; J Tuomisto; A B Okey
Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol       Date:  1999-02-15       Impact factor: 4.219

2.  Widespread parallel evolution in sticklebacks by repeated fixation of Ectodysplasin alleles.

Authors:  Pamela F Colosimo; Kim E Hosemann; Sarita Balabhadra; Guadalupe Villarreal; Mark Dickson; Jane Grimwood; Jeremy Schmutz; Richard M Myers; Dolph Schluter; David M Kingsley
Journal:  Science       Date:  2005-03-25       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Genetic architecture of susceptibility to PCB126-induced developmental cardiotoxicity in zebrafish.

Authors:  Eric R Waits; Daniel W Nebert
Journal:  Toxicol Sci       Date:  2011-05-24       Impact factor: 4.849

4.  Heart malformation is an early response to TCDD in embryonic zebrafish.

Authors:  Dagmara S Antkiewicz; C Geoffrey Burns; Sara A Carney; Richard E Peterson; Warren Heideman
Journal:  Toxicol Sci       Date:  2005-01-05       Impact factor: 4.849

5.  Tumor classification by partial least squares using microarray gene expression data.

Authors:  Danh V Nguyen; David M Rocke
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 6.937

Review 6.  The aryl hydrocarbon receptor complex.

Authors:  O Hankinson
Journal:  Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 13.820

7.  2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor/aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator pathway causes developmental toxicity through a CYP1A-independent mechanism in zebrafish.

Authors:  Sara A Carney; Richard E Peterson; Warren Heideman
Journal:  Mol Pharmacol       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 4.436

8.  Aryl hydrocarbon receptor polymorphisms and dioxin resistance in Atlantic killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus).

Authors:  Mark E Hahn; Sibel I Karchner; Diana G Franks; Rebeka R Merson
Journal:  Pharmacogenetics       Date:  2004-02

9.  Intra-strain dioxin sensitivity and morphometric effects in swim-up rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).

Authors:  Paulo S M Carvalho; Douglas B Noltie; Donald E Tillitt
Journal:  Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 3.228

Review 10.  The genetics and genomics of insecticide resistance.

Authors:  Richard H Ffrench-Constant; Phillip J Daborn; Gaelle Le Goff
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 11.639

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  40 in total

Review 1.  Reproductive and developmental toxicity of dioxin in fish.

Authors:  Tisha C King-Heiden; Vatsal Mehta; Kong M Xiong; Kevin A Lanham; Dagmara S Antkiewicz; Alissa Ganser; Warren Heideman; Richard E Peterson
Journal:  Mol Cell Endocrinol       Date:  2011-09-21       Impact factor: 4.102

Review 2.  Functional genomics to assess biological responses to marine pollution at physiological and evolutionary timescales: toward a vision of predictive ecotoxicology.

Authors:  Noah M Reid; Andrew Whitehead
Journal:  Brief Funct Genomics       Date:  2015-12-22       Impact factor: 4.241

3.  Spatial variability of metal bioaccumulation in estuarine killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus) at the Callahan mine superfund site, Brooksville, ME.

Authors:  Hannah J Broadley; Kate L Buckman; Deenie M Bugge; Celia Y Chen
Journal:  Arch Environ Contam Toxicol       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 2.804

Review 4.  Applying evolutionary genetics to developmental toxicology and risk assessment.

Authors:  Maxwell C K Leung; Andrew C Procter; Jared V Goldstone; Jonathan Foox; Robert DeSalle; Carolyn J Mattingly; Mark E Siddall; Alicia R Timme-Laragy
Journal:  Reprod Toxicol       Date:  2017-03-04       Impact factor: 3.143

5.  Multitissue molecular, genomic, and developmental effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on resident Gulf killifish (Fundulus grandis).

Authors:  Benjamin Dubansky; Andrew Whitehead; Jeffrey T Miller; Charles D Rice; Fernando Galvez
Journal:  Environ Sci Technol       Date:  2013-05-09       Impact factor: 9.028

6.  Complexities of gene expression patterns in natural populations of an extremophile fish (Poecilia mexicana, Poeciliidae).

Authors:  Courtney N Passow; Anthony P Brown; Lenin Arias-Rodriguez; Muh-Ching Yee; Alexandra Sockell; Manfred Schartl; Wesley C Warren; Carlos Bustamante; Joanna L Kelley; Michael Tobler
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2017-07-04       Impact factor: 6.185

Review 7.  Urban driven phenotypic changes: empirical observations and theoretical implications for eco-evolutionary feedback.

Authors:  Marina Alberti; John Marzluff; Victoria M Hunt
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2017-01-19       Impact factor: 6.237

8.  Differential sensitivity to pro-oxidant exposure in two populations of killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus).

Authors:  Rachel C Harbeitner; Mark E Hahn; Alicia R Timme-Laragy
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2013-01-18       Impact factor: 2.823

9.  Variation in toxicity of a current-use insecticide among resurrected Daphnia pulicaria genotypes.

Authors:  Adam M Simpson; Punidan D Jeyasingh; Jason B Belden
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2014-12-07       Impact factor: 2.823

10.  The genomic landscape of rapid repeated evolutionary adaptation to toxic pollution in wild fish.

Authors:  Noah M Reid; Dina A Proestou; Bryan W Clark; Wesley C Warren; John K Colbourne; Joseph R Shaw; Sibel I Karchner; Mark E Hahn; Diane Nacci; Marjorie F Oleksiak; Douglas L Crawford; Andrew Whitehead
Journal:  Science       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 47.728

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