Integrative analyses of convergent adaptation in sympatric extremophile fishes.

Curr Biol

University of Missouri, St. Louis, Department of Biology, 1 University Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63121, USA; University of Missouri, St. Louis, Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center, 1 University Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63121, USA; Saint Louis Zoo, WildCare Institute, 1 Government Drive, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how three species of poeciliid fishes adapted to both a toxic hydrogen sulfide spring and a nearby non-toxic stream, focusing on convergent evolution across different biological levels.
  • Researchers found that the species exhibited convergence in their morphology, physiology, and gene expression, indicating shared adaptations to high HS toxicity.
  • However, the genetic analysis showed that while there were some gene similarities, there was no significant convergence in their nuclear genomes, suggesting HS tolerance might be complex and involve many genes with small effects rather than a few key ones.

Article Abstract

The evolution of independent lineages along replicated environmental transitions frequently results in convergent adaptation, yet the degree to which convergence is present across multiple levels of biological organization is often unclear. Additionally, inherent biases associated with shared ancestry and variation in selective regimes across geographic replicates often pose challenges for confidently identifying patterns of convergence. We investigated a system in which three species of poeciliid fishes sympatrically occur in a toxic spring rich in hydrogen sulfide (HS) and an adjacent nonsulfidic stream to examine patterns of adaptive evolution across levels of biological organization. We found convergence in morphological and physiological traits and genome-wide patterns of gene expression among all three species. In addition, there were shared signatures of selection on genes encoding HS toxicity targets in the mitochondrial genomes of each species. However, analyses of nuclear genomes revealed neither evidence for substantial genomic islands of divergence around genes involved in HS toxicity and detoxification nor substantial congruence of strongly differentiated regions across population pairs. These non-convergent, heterogeneous patterns of genomic divergence may indicate that sulfide tolerance is highly polygenic, with shared allele frequency shifts present at many loci with small effects along the genome. Alternatively, HS tolerance may involve substantial genetic redundancy, with non-convergent, lineage-specific variation at multiple loci along the genome underpinning similar changes in phenotypes and gene expression. Overall, we demonstrate variability in the extent of convergence across organizational levels and highlight the challenges of linking patterns of convergence across scales.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.09.027DOI Listing

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