Emily B Josephs1,2. 1. Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616, USA. 2. Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Abstract
Contents Summary 31 I. Introduction 31 II. The maintenance of genetic variation for plasticity 32 III. Why is there environmental variation for genetic effects? 33 IV. Conclusions 35 Acknowledgements 35 References 35 SUMMARY: Phenotypic plasticity is common in nature, yet we lack a comprehensive understanding of the evolutionary forces that shape genetic variation for plasticity. This endeavor is especially important because variation for plasticity will result in genotype-by-environment interactions (G × E), a crucial component of variation in quantitative traits. Here, I review our understanding of the evolutionary forces shaping G × E, focusing specifically on: what evolutionary forces maintain variation for plasticity; and what forces maintain different genetic architectures across environments. My specific goal is to show that genomic data can be leveraged to explain the maintenance of G × E by contrasting patterns of genetic variation for plasticity with neutral expectations.
Contents Summary 31 I. Introduction 31 II. The maintenance of genetic variation for plasticity 32 III. Why is there environmental variation for genetic effects? 33 IV. Conclusions 35 Acknowledgements 35 References 35 SUMMARY: Phenotypic plasticity is common in nature, yet we lack a comprehensive understanding of the evolutionary forces that shape genetic variation for plasticity. This endeavor is especially important because variation for plasticity will result in genotype-by-environment interactions (G × E), a crucial component of variation in quantitative traits. Here, I review our understanding of the evolutionary forces shaping G × E, focusing specifically on: what evolutionary forces maintain variation for plasticity; and what forces maintain different genetic architectures across environments. My specific goal is to show that genomic data can be leveraged to explain the maintenance of G × E by contrasting patterns of genetic variation for plasticity with neutral expectations.
Authors: Asher I Hudson; Sarah G Odell; Pierre Dubreuil; Marie-Helene Tixier; Sebastien Praud; Daniel E Runcie; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra Journal: G3 (Bethesda) Date: 2022-03-04 Impact factor: 3.154