Literature DB >> 23110657

From nature to the laboratory: the impact of founder effects on adaptation.

J Santos1, M Pascual, P Simões, I Fragata, M Lima, B Kellen, M Santos, A Marques, M R Rose, M Matos.   

Abstract

Most founding events entail a reduction in population size, which in turn leads to genetic drift effects that can deplete alleles. Besides reducing neutral genetic variability, founder effects can in principle shift additive genetic variance for phenotypes that underlie fitness. This could then lead to different rates of adaptation among populations that have undergone a population size bottleneck as well as an environmental change, even when these populations have a common evolutionary history. Thus, theory suggests that there should be an association between observable genetic variability for both neutral markers and phenotypes related to fitness. Here, we test this scenario by monitoring the early evolutionary dynamics of six laboratory foundations derived from founders taken from the same source natural population of Drosophila subobscura. Each foundation was in turn three-fold replicated. During their first few generations, these six foundations showed an abrupt increase in their genetic differentiation, within and between foundations. The eighteen populations that were monitored also differed in their patterns of phenotypic adaptation according to their immediately ancestral founding sample. Differences in early genetic variability and in effective population size were found to predict differences in the rate of adaptation during the first 21 generations of laboratory evolution. We show that evolution in a novel environment is strongly contingent not only on the initial composition of a newly founded population but also on the stochastic changes that occur during the first generations of colonization. Such effects make laboratory populations poor guides to the evolutionary genetic properties of their ancestral wild populations.
© 2012 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2012 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23110657     DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Evol Biol        ISSN: 1010-061X            Impact factor:   2.411


  9 in total

1.  Fast evolutionary genetic differentiation during experimental colonizations.

Authors:  Josiane Santos; Marta Pascual; Pedro Simões; Inês Fragata; Michael R Rose; Margarida Matos
Journal:  J Genet       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.166

2.  Genomic Trajectories to Desiccation Resistance: Convergence and Divergence Among Replicate Selected Drosophila Lines.

Authors:  Philippa C Griffin; Sandra B Hangartner; Alexandre Fournier-Level; Ary A Hoffmann
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2016-12-22       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  Analyses of locomotion, wing morphology, and microbiome in Drosophila nigrosparsa after recovery from antibiotics.

Authors:  Simon O Weiland; Matsapume Detcharoen; Birgit C Schlick-Steiner; Florian M Steiner
Journal:  Microbiologyopen       Date:  2022-06       Impact factor: 3.904

4.  Environment and phenology shape local adaptation in thermal performance.

Authors:  Andrew R Villeneuve; Lisa M Komoroske; Brian S Cheng
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-07-28       Impact factor: 5.530

5.  Laboratory selection quickly erases historical differentiation.

Authors:  Inês Fragata; Pedro Simões; Miguel Lopes-Cunha; Margarida Lima; Bárbara Kellen; Margarida Bárbaro; Josiane Santos; Michael R Rose; Mauro Santos; Margarida Matos
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-05-02       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Introduced Drosophila subobscura populations perform better than native populations during an oviposition choice task due to increased fecundity but similar learning ability.

Authors:  Julien Foucaud; Céline Moreno; Marta Pascual; Enrico L Rezende; Luis E Castañeda; Patricia Gibert; Frederic Mery
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2016-02-16       Impact factor: 2.912

7.  Predictable phenotypic, but not karyotypic, evolution of populations with contrasting initial history.

Authors:  Pedro Simões; Inês Fragata; Sofia G Seabra; Gonçalo S Faria; Marta A Santos; Michael R Rose; Mauro Santos; Margarida Matos
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-04-19       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Equivalent susceptibility of Anopheles gambiae M and S molecular forms and Anopheles arabiensis to Plasmodium falciparum infection in Burkina Faso.

Authors:  Awa Gnémé; Wamdaogo M Guelbéogo; Michelle M Riehle; Antoine Sanou; Alphonse Traoré; Soumanaba Zongo; Karin Eiglmeier; Gustave B Kabré; N'Falé Sagnon; Kenneth D Vernick
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2013-06-14       Impact factor: 2.979

9.  History, chance and selection during phenotypic and genomic experimental evolution: replaying the tape of life at different levels.

Authors:  Margarida Matos; Pedro Simões; Marta A Santos; Sofia G Seabra; Gonçalo S Faria; Filipa Vala; Josiane Santos; Inês Fragata
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2015-02-25       Impact factor: 4.599

  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.