Museomics Dissects the Genetic Basis for Adaptive Seasonal Coloration in the Least Weasel.

Mol Biol Evol

CIBIO, Centro de Investigação em Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos, InBIO Laboratório Associado, Universidade do Porto, Vairão, Portugal.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how genetic variation influences adaptive traits, focusing on the winter coat colors of least weasels (Mustela nivalis) that adapt for camouflage in different snowy environments.
  • Researchers used whole-genome sequencing to analyze samples from two regions in Europe where the weasels show distinct white and brown winter coat morphs.
  • An association was found between coat color and the MC1R pigmentation gene, with a specific amino acid change linked to the brown morph, indicating that single gene changes can significantly impact seasonal camouflage.

Article Abstract

Dissecting the link between genetic variation and adaptive phenotypes provides outstanding opportunities to understand fundamental evolutionary processes. Here, we use a museomics approach to investigate the genetic basis and evolution of winter coat coloration morphs in least weasels (Mustela nivalis), a repeated adaptation for camouflage in mammals with seasonal pelage color moults across regions with varying winter snow. Whole-genome sequence data were obtained from biological collections and mapped onto a newly assembled reference genome for the species. Sampling represented two replicate transition zones between nivalis and vulgaris coloration morphs in Europe, which typically develop white or brown winter coats, respectively. Population analyses showed that the morph distribution across transition zones is not a by-product of historical structure. Association scans linked a 200-kb genomic region to coloration morph, which was validated by genotyping museum specimens from intermorph experimental crosses. Genotyping the wild populations narrowed down the association to pigmentation gene MC1R and pinpointed a candidate amino acid change cosegregating with coloration morph. This polymorphism replaces an ancestral leucine residue by lysine at the start of the first extracellular loop of the protein in the vulgaris morph. A selective sweep signature overlapped the association region in vulgaris, suggesting that past adaptation favored winter-brown morphs and can anchor future adaptive responses to decreasing winter snow. Using biological collections as valuable resources to study natural adaptations, our study showed a new evolutionary route generating winter color variation in mammals and that seasonal camouflage can be modulated by changes at single key genes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8476133PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msab177DOI Listing

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