TY - JOUR
T1 - A multiscale approach to detect selection in nonmodel tree species
T2 - Widespread adaptation despite population decline in Taxus baccata L
AU - Mayol, Maria
AU - Riba, Miquel
AU - Cavers, Stephen
AU - Grivet, Delphine
AU - Vincenot, Lucie
AU - Cattonaro, Federica
AU - Vendramin, Giovanni G.
AU - González-Martínez, Santiago C.
N1 - Funding Information:
We kindly thank D. Ballian and L. Paule for providing yew samples. We are also indebted to E. Berganzo for her support with clonal bank measurements, C. García‐Barriga for laboratory assistance, and I. Regalado and C. Batlles for help in sample collection. We thank the reviewers for their helpful comments and for the suggestion of a new title. This work was supported by projects TAXUS (CGL2007‐63107⁄BOS) and ADAPCON (CGL2011‐30182‐C02‐01/02) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness. This publication is also part of a project funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No. 676876 (GenTree). Special thanks to S. Iglesias and the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food for granting permit to work in the Valsaín Clonal Bank and all related logistic support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Detecting the molecular basis of local adaptation and identifying selective drivers is still challenging in nonmodel species. The use of purely population genetic approaches is limited by some characteristics of genetic systems, such as pleiotropy and polygenic control, and parallel evidence from phenotypic-based experimental comparisons is required. In long-lived organisms, the detection of selective pressures might also be precluded by evolutionary lag times in response to the environment. Here, we used the English yew to showcase an example of a multiscale integrative approach in a nonmodel species with limited plant and genomic resources. We combined information from two independent sources, phenotypes in a common environment and genomic data in natural populations, to investigate the signature of selection. Growth differences among populations in a common environment, and phenological patterns of both shoot elongation and male strobili maturation, were associated with climate clines, providing evidence for local adaptation and guiding us in the selection of populations for genomic analyses. We used information on over 25,000 SNPs from c. 1,200 genes to infer the demographic history and to test for molecular signatures of selection at different levels: SNP, gene, and biological pathway. Our results confirmed an overall demographic history of population decline, but we also found evidence for putative local adaptation at the molecular level. We identified or confirmed several candidate genes for positive and negative selection in forest trees, including the pseudo-response regulator 7 (PRR7), an essential component of the circadian clock in plants. In addition, we successfully tested an approach to detect polygenic adaptation in biological pathways, allowing us to identify the flavonoid biosynthesis pathway as a candidate stress-response pathway that deserves further attention in other plants. Finally, our study contributes to the emerging view that explaining contemporary standing genetic variation requires considering adaptation to past climates, especially for long-lived trees.
AB - Detecting the molecular basis of local adaptation and identifying selective drivers is still challenging in nonmodel species. The use of purely population genetic approaches is limited by some characteristics of genetic systems, such as pleiotropy and polygenic control, and parallel evidence from phenotypic-based experimental comparisons is required. In long-lived organisms, the detection of selective pressures might also be precluded by evolutionary lag times in response to the environment. Here, we used the English yew to showcase an example of a multiscale integrative approach in a nonmodel species with limited plant and genomic resources. We combined information from two independent sources, phenotypes in a common environment and genomic data in natural populations, to investigate the signature of selection. Growth differences among populations in a common environment, and phenological patterns of both shoot elongation and male strobili maturation, were associated with climate clines, providing evidence for local adaptation and guiding us in the selection of populations for genomic analyses. We used information on over 25,000 SNPs from c. 1,200 genes to infer the demographic history and to test for molecular signatures of selection at different levels: SNP, gene, and biological pathway. Our results confirmed an overall demographic history of population decline, but we also found evidence for putative local adaptation at the molecular level. We identified or confirmed several candidate genes for positive and negative selection in forest trees, including the pseudo-response regulator 7 (PRR7), an essential component of the circadian clock in plants. In addition, we successfully tested an approach to detect polygenic adaptation in biological pathways, allowing us to identify the flavonoid biosynthesis pathway as a candidate stress-response pathway that deserves further attention in other plants. Finally, our study contributes to the emerging view that explaining contemporary standing genetic variation requires considering adaptation to past climates, especially for long-lived trees.
KW - English yew (Taxus baccata)
KW - adaptation
KW - demographic decline
KW - environmental association
KW - polygenic adaptation
KW - single nucleotide polymorphism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077140994&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/eva.12838
DO - 10.1111/eva.12838
M3 - Artículo
C2 - 31892949
AN - SCOPUS:85077140994
SN - 1752-4563
VL - 13
SP - 143
EP - 160
JO - Evolutionary Applications
JF - Evolutionary Applications
IS - 1
ER -