AI Article Synopsis

  • Laboratory adaptation and selection for toxin resistance in Heliothis virescens lead to significant inbreeding and genetic bottlenecks, decreasing genetic variation.
  • Through 350-bp ddRAD-seq markers, it was found that allelic and nucleotide diversity in lab-reared populations fell dramatically compared to those from the field, primarily due to the loss of rare alleles.
  • The most severe reduction in genetic diversity occurred in populations subjected to 10 generations of sib-mating, which resulted in over 80% of loci becoming fixed for a single allele, while a dense intraspecific linkage map was created to identify genomic regions resistant to this fixation.

Article Abstract

Adaptation of pest species to laboratory conditions and selection for resistance to toxins in the laboratory are expected to cause inbreeding and genetic bottlenecks that reduce genetic variation. Heliothis virescens, a major cotton pest, has been colonized in the laboratory many times, and a few laboratory colonies have been selected for Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) resistance. We developed 350-bp double-digest restriction-site associated DNA-sequencing (ddRAD-seq) molecular markers to examine and compare changes in genetic variation associated with laboratory adaptation, artificial selection and inbreeding in this nonmodel insect species. We found that allelic and nucleotide diversity declined dramatically in laboratory-reared H. virescens as compared with field-collected populations. The declines were primarily a result of the loss of low frequency alleles present in field-collected H. virescens. A further, albeit modest decline in genetic diversity was observed in a Bt-selected population. The greatest decline was seen in H. virescens that were sib-mated for 10 generations, in which more than 80% of loci were fixed for a single allele. To determine which regions of the genome were resistant to fixation in our sib-mated line, we generated a dense intraspecific linkage map containing three PCR-based and 659 ddRAD-seq markers. Markers that retained polymorphism were observed in small clusters spread over multiple linkage groups, but this clustering was not statistically significant. Overall, we have confirmed and extended the general expectations for reduced genetic diversity in laboratory colonies, provided tools for further genomic analyses and produced highly homozygous genomic DNA for future whole genome sequencing of H. virescens.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imb.12234DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

selection inbreeding
8
heliothis virescens
8
genetic variation
8
laboratory colonies
8
genetic diversity
8
genetic
6
laboratory
6
application dense
4
dense genetic
4
genetic map
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!