4.6 Article

Temporal genomic contrasts reveal rapid evolutionary responses in an alpine mammal during recent climate change

期刊

PLOS GENETICS
卷 15, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008119

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资金

  1. NSERC postdoctoral fellowship
  2. University of California Berkeley VCR-BiGCB
  3. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF2983]
  4. NIH Genomics Training Grant [T32HG000047-13]
  5. Yosemite Conservancy
  6. National Park Service Inventory and Monitoring Program
  7. National Geographic Society [8190-07]
  8. National Science Foundation [DEB 0640859]
  9. M. J. Murdock Charitable Trust
  10. Vincent J. Coates Genomics Sequencing Laboratory at UC Berkeley - NIH S10 Instrumentation Grants [S10RR029668, S10RR027303]
  11. Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas at Austin
  12. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R01HD073439]
  13. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01GM098536]

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Many species have experienced dramatic changes in their abundance and distribution during recent climate change, but it is often unclear whether such ecological responses are accompanied by evolutionary change. We used targeted exon sequencing of 294 museum specimens (160 historic, 134 modern) to generate independent temporal genomic contrasts spanning a century of climate change (1911-2012) for two co-distributed chipmunk species: an endemic alpine specialist (Tamias alpinus) undergoing severe range contraction and a stable mid-elevation species (T. speciosus). Using a novel analytical approach, we reconstructed the demographic histories of these populations and tested for evidence of recent positive directional selection. Only the retracting species showed substantial population genetic fragmentation through time and this was coupled with positive selection and substantial shifts in allele frequencies at a gene, Alox15, involved in regulation of inflammation and response to hypoxia. However, these rapid population and gene-level responses were not detected in an analogous temporal contrast from another area where T. alpinus has also undergone severe range contraction. Collectively, these results highlight that evolutionary responses may be variable and context dependent across populations, even when they show seemingly synchronous ecological shifts. Our results demonstrate that temporal genomic contrasts can be used to detect very recent evolutionary responses within and among contemporary populations, even in the face of complex demographic changes. Given the wealth of specimens archived in natural history museums, comparative analyses of temporal population genomic data have the potential to improve our understanding of recent and ongoing evolutionary responses to rapidly changing environments.

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