4.8 Article

Locally Adaptive Inversions Modulate Genetic Variation at Different Geographic Scales in a Seaweed Fly

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 38, Issue 9, Pages 3953-3971

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab143

Keywords

structural variants; population genomics; local adaptation; diptera; environmental associations

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway
  2. Southeastern Regional Health Authorities
  3. McGill Sequencing Platform at IBIS (University Laval)
  4. genomic platform at IBIS (University Laval)
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. Canadian Research Chair in genomics and conservation of aquatic resources
  7. Swedish Research Council [2012-3996]
  8. Canada 150 Sequencing Initiative [CanSeq150]
  9. CFI
  10. Genome Canada Technology Platform grants
  11. Fonds de Recherche Quebec [FRQS260724, FRQNT200125]
  12. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship from the NSERC [162647]

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This study examines how chromosomal inversions shape genetic variation in a species across different environmental gradients, finding that these structural variants influence population differentiation and adaptation to environmental factors. The results highlight the importance of recombination in shaping adaptation to environmental heterogeneity at both local and large scales.
Across a species range, multiple sources of environmental heterogeneity, at both small and large scales, create complex landscapes of selection, which may challenge adaptation, particularly when gene flow is high. One key to multidimensional adaptation may reside in the heterogeneity of recombination along the genome. Structural variants, like chromosomal inversions, reduce recombination, increasing linkage disequilibrium among loci at a potentially massive scale. In this study, we examined how chromosomal inversions shape genetic variation across a species range and ask how their contribution to adaptation in the face of gene flow varies across geographic scales. We sampled the seaweed fly Coelopa frigida along a bioclimatic gradient stretching across 10 degrees of latitude, a salinity gradient, and a range of heterogeneous, patchy habitats. We generated a chromosome-level genome assembly to analyze 1,446 low-coverage whole genomes collected along those gradients. We found several large nonrecombining genomic regions, including putative inversions. In contrast to the collinear regions, inversions and low-recombining regions differentiated populations more strongly, either along an ecogeographic dine or at a fine-grained scale. These genomic regions were associated with environmental factors and adaptive phenotypes, albeit with contrasting patterns. Altogether, our results highlight the importance of recombination in shaping adaptation to environmental heterogeneity at local and large scales.

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