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The genetic basis of a recent transition to live-bearing in marine snails.

Sean StankowskiZuzanna B ZagrodzkaMartin D GarlovskyArka PalDaria ShipilinaDiego Garcia CastilloHila LifchitzAlan Le MoanErica H LederJames ReeveKerstin JohannessonAnja Marie WestramRoger K Butlin
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Key innovations are fundamental to biological diversification, but their genetic basis is poorly understood. A recent transition from egg-laying to live-bearing in marine snails ( Littorina spp.) provides the opportunity to study the genetic architecture of an innovation that has evolved repeatedly across animals. Individuals do not cluster by reproductive mode in a genome-wide phylogeny, but local genealogical analysis revealed numerous small genomic regions where all live-bearers carry the same core haplotype. Candidate regions show evidence for live-bearer-specific positive selection and are enriched for genes that are differentially expressed between egg-laying and live-bearing reproductive systems. Ages of selective sweeps suggest that live-bearer-specific alleles accumulated over more than 200,000 generations. Our results suggest that new functions evolve through the recruitment of many alleles rather than in a single evolutionary step.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • single cell