4.7 Article

Weak genetic signal for phenotypic integration implicates developmental processes as major regulators of trait covariation

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 464-480

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15748

Keywords

bone; development; geometric morphometrics; heart; phenotypic integration

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01DE026446]

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The study examined the relationship between phenotypic integration and genetic basis, revealing widespread associations among traits at the phenotypic level, but few overlapping genetic regions through QTL analysis. The findings suggest developmental interactions may play a significant role in determining the degree of phenotypic integration among traits.
Phenotypic integration is an important metric that describes the degree of covariation among traits in a population, and is hypothesized to arise due to selection for shared functional processes. Our ability to identify the genetic and/or developmental underpinnings of integration is marred by temporally overlapping cell-, tissue- and structure-level processes that serve to continually 'overwrite' the structure of covariation among traits through ontogeny. Here, we examine whether traits that are integrated at the phenotypic level also exhibit a shared genetic basis (e.g. pleiotropy). We micro-CT scanned two hard tissue traits, and two soft tissue traits (mandible, pectoral girdle, atrium and ventricle, respectively) from an F-5 hybrid population of Lake Malawi cichlids, and used geometric morphometrics to extract 3D shape information from each trait. Given the large degree of asymmetric variation that may reflect developmental instability, we separated symmetric from asymmetric components of shape variation. We then performed quantitative trait loci (QTL) analysis to determine the degree of genetic overlap between shapes. While we found ubiquitous associations among traits at the phenotypic level, except for a handful of notable exceptions, our QTL analysis revealed few overlapping genetic regions. Taken together, this indicates developmental interactions can play a large role in determining the degree of phenotypic integration among traits, and likely obfuscate the genotype to phenotype map, limiting our ability to gain a comprehensive picture of the genetic contributors responsible for phenotypic divergence.

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