Ecological Speciation Promoted by Divergent Regulation of Functional Genes Within African Cichlid Fishes.
Madeleine CarruthersDuncan E EdgleyAndrew D SaxonNestory P GabagambiAsilatu ShechongeEric A MiskaRichard DurbinJon R BridleGeorge F TurnerMartin J GennerPublished in: Molecular biology and evolution (2022)
Rapid ecological speciation along depth gradients has taken place repeatedly in freshwater fishes, yet molecular mechanisms facilitating such diversification are typically unclear. In Lake Masoko, an African crater lake, the cichlid Astatotilapia calliptera has diverged into shallow-littoral and deep-benthic ecomorphs with strikingly different jaw structures within the last 1,000 years. Using genome-wide transcriptome data, we explore two major regulatory transcriptional mechanisms, expression and splicing-QTL variants, and examine their contributions to differential gene expression underpinning functional phenotypes. We identified 7,550 genes with significant differential expression between ecomorphs, of which 5.4% were regulated by cis-regulatory expression QTLs, and 9.2% were regulated by cis-regulatory splicing QTLs. We also found strong signals of divergent selection on differentially expressed genes associated with craniofacial development. These results suggest that large-scale transcriptome modification plays an important role during early-stage speciation. We conclude that regulatory variants are important targets of selection driving ecologically relevant divergence in gene expression during adaptive diversification.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- copy number
- transcription factor
- early stage
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- high resolution
- optical coherence tomography
- single cell
- binding protein
- genome wide identification
- machine learning
- oxidative stress
- bioinformatics analysis
- long non coding rna
- lymph node
- human health
- organic matter
- big data
- sentinel lymph node
- heat shock protein
- risk assessment