| Literature DB >> 30832572 |
Shohei Takuno1, Ryutaro Miyagi2,3, Jun-Ichi Onami4, Shiho Takahashi-Kariyazono1, Akie Sato5, Herbert Tichy6, Masato Nikaido7, Mitsuto Aibara2, Shinji Mizoiri2, Hillary D J Mrosso8, Semvua I Mzighani2,8, Norihiro Okada9,10,11, Yohey Terai12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The molecular basis of the incipient stage of speciation is still poorly understood. Cichlid fish species in Lake Victoria are a prime example of recent speciation events and a suitable system to study the adaptation and reproductive isolation of species.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Cichlids; Genomic islands of speciation; Population genomics; Speciation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30832572 PMCID: PMC6399900 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-019-1387-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1(a) Adult males of Haplochromis pyrrhocephalus and H. sp. ‘macula’ with nuptial coloration. A sampling location from the Mwaburugu region is shown by a dot on the map of Lake Victoria. (b) Average FST values (±1 SD) against coverage for Pool-seq data. The blue and orange dots represent observed and simulated values under panmixia
Fig. 2The spatial patterns of the average values of intraspecies nucleotide diversity in H. pyrrhocephalus and in H. sp. ‘macula’ (πW; pink); average pairwise nucleotide divergence between the species (πB; blue); and FST (green). (a) Typical genomic regions. (b–e) Candidates of the target genes of divergent selection. The green arrows represent fixed nucleotide differences between species. Green and blue solid lines indicate differentiated regions (DRs) and exons of genes, respectively. The positions of DRs are described on the right side of the green lines
Genes in DRs
| DRs | Gene name | Predicted functions related to adaptation and speciation c |
|---|---|---|
| DR1a | diaphanous | Developmental process, cell movement, auditory |
| DR2a | ventral anterior homeobox 2 | Development of retina |
| DR3a | prostaglandin d2 receptor 2 | Unknown |
| G-protein coupled receptor 4 (GPR4) | Adaptive to different oxygen concentration | |
| UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 2b15 | Unknown | |
| DR4 | hemicentin-1 | Unknown |
| DR5a | long wavelength-sensitive opsin (LWS) | Speciation by sensory drive |
| DR6a | netrin receptor UNC5c | Brain development |
| DR7 | general transcription factor IIH subunit 1 | Unknown |
| DR8a | intestinal mucin | Host-specific microbiota composition |
| DR9a | hepatocyte growth factor receptor | Morphogenesis for the muscles of fins, affecting mobility |
| DR10a | Developmental process | |
| DR11a | ap-4 complex subunit epsilon | Unknown |
| cytochrome p450 aromatase type II | Sexual differentiation of the brain and reproductive behavior | |
| gliomedin | Unknown | |
| DR12a | melanopsin A | Photic regulation of circadian clocks |
| DR13 | No gene | – |
| DR14 | Uncharacterized protein | – |
| Uncharacterized protein | – | |
| DR15 | Uncharacterized ncRNA | – |
| DR16a | aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator | Adaptive to different oxygen concentrations |
| DR17 | UDP-n-acetylglucosamine transporter | Unknown |
| U3 small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein protein imp3 | Unknown | |
| DR18a | peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase H | Unknown |
| transcription initiation factor TFIID subunit 10 | Early embryonic development | |
| G-protein coupled receptor 160 | Unknown | |
| DR19a | type II cytoskeletal 5 | Epidermis development |
| DR20a | hydroperoxide isomerase aloxe3 | Epidermis development |
| macrophage mannose receptor 1 | Unknown | |
| DR21a | Ras-related protein rab-11a | Unknown |
| RNA-binding protein mex3a | Brain aging |
aDRs contained genes with predicted roles for adaptation and speciation
bThis DR did not contain a gene, but tbx3 was located 30 kbp downstream from this DR
cReferences are listed in Additional file 6: Table S1
Fig. 3The hitchhiking effect of divergent selection when a new beneficial allele arises by a new mutation (a) and is derived from standing variation (b). The x-axes represent distance from the target site of divergent selection (scaled by the population recombination rate), and the y-axes represent nucleotide diversity in population 1 (πW; red), πW in population 2 (orange), average pairwise nucleotide divergence between species (πB; blue), and FST (green). Dashed gray lines indicate the theoretical expectations of πW and FST under neutrality
Fig. 4(a–d) Different expression levels of genes between H. pyrrhocephalus (Hpyr) and H. sp. ‘macula’ (Hmac). Expression was analyzed by qPCR using RNA from eyes (a, each of three individuals) and the anterior part of lateral skin (b–d, 10 individuals each). Gene names are shown at the top of the panels. The direction of blue arrows indicates the gene direction. Black arrows and blue solid lines represent the positions of fixed differences and exons of genes, respectively. The numbers and nucleotides under the numbers in the rectangles indicate the position from the initiation codon and fixed nucleotides in H. pyrrhocephalus (upper) and H. sp. ‘macula’ (lower), respectively
Fig. 5The origins of mutations in DRs. Three genealogies represent the accumulation of mutations tracing back to the common ancestral species of (a) Lake Victoria species, (b) Lake Victoria and riverine Haplochromis species, and (c) Modern haplochromines. Blue and red lines indicate H. pyrrhocephalus and H. sp. ‘macula’ alleles, respectively