AI Article Synopsis

  • The genetic basis for phenotypic variation can differ greatly between populations, especially if founded by a small number of genotypes.
  • Different traits, such as resistance to various pathogens, may share some genetic similarities (pleiotropy) or exhibit distinct genetic profiles indicating context-dependent selection.
  • A study on Drosophila's immune response to two different pathogens showed no shared genetic architecture for bacterial resistance but identified a common QTL peak related to immune genes, suggesting natural selection could influence these genes for both pathogens.

Article Abstract

The genetic causes of phenotypic variation often differ depending on the population examined, particularly if the populations were founded by relatively small numbers of genotypes. Similarly, the genetic causes of phenotypic variation among similar traits (resistance to different xenobiotic compounds or pathogens) may also be completely different or only partially overlapping. Differences in genetic causes for variation in the same trait among populations suggests context dependence for how selection acts on those traits. Similarities in the genetic causes of variation for different traits, on the other hand, suggests pleiotropy which would also influence how natural selection shapes variation in a trait. We characterized immune defense against a natural Drosophila pathogen, the Gram-positive bacterium Lysinibacillus fusiformis, in three different populations and found almost no overlap in the genetic architecture of variation in survival post infection. However, when comparing our results to a similar experiment with the fungal pathogen, B. bassiana, we found a convincing shared QTL peak for both pathogens. This peak contains the Bomanin cluster of Drosophila immune effectors. Loss of function mutants and RNAi knockdown experiments confirms a role of some of these genes in immune defense against both pathogens. This suggests that natural selection may act on the entire cluster of Bomanin genes (and the linked region under the QTL) or specific peptides for specific pathogens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434897PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010934DOI Listing

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