4.7 Article Book Chapter

The role of gene expression in ecological speciation

Journal

YEAR IN EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 1206, Issue -, Pages 110-129

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05765.x

Keywords

adiptive divergence; eQTL; microarray phenotypic plasticity; population persistence; qPCR reproductive isolation; speciation cis-regulatory mutation gene expression

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Ecological speciation is the process by which barriers to gene flow between populations evolve due to adaptive divergence via natural selection A relatively unexplored area in ecological speciation is the role of gene expression Gene expression may be associated with ecologically important phenotypes not evident from morphology and play a role during colonization of new environments Here we review two potential roles of gene expression in ecological speciation (1) its indirect role in facilitating population persistence and (2) its direct role in contributing to genetically based reproductive isolation We find indirect evidence that gene expression facilitates population persistence, but direct tests are lacking We also find clear examples of gene expression having effects on phenotypic traits and adaptive genetic divergence, but links to the evolution of reproductive isolation itself remain indirect Gene expression during adaptive divergence seems to often involve complex genetic architectures controlled by gene networks, regulatory regions, and eQTL hotspots Nonetheless, we review how approaches for isolating the functional mutations contributing to adaptive divergence are proving to be successful The study of gene expression has promise for increasing our understanding ecological speciation, particularly when integrative approaches are applied

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