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  4. The Genomic Architecture of Adaptation to Larval Malnutrition Points to a Trade-off with Adult Starvation Resistance in Drosophila
 
research article

The Genomic Architecture of Adaptation to Larval Malnutrition Points to a Trade-off with Adult Starvation Resistance in Drosophila

Kawecki, Tadeusz J.
•
Erkosar, Berra
•
Dupuis, Cindy
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July 1, 2021
Molecular Biology And Evolution

Periods of nutrient shortage impose strong selection on animal populations. Experimental studies of genetic adaptation to nutrient shortage largely focus on resistance to acute starvation at adult stage; it is not clear how conclusions drawn from these studies extrapolate to other forms of nutritional stress. We studied the genomic signature of adaptation to chronic juvenile malnutrition in six populations of Drosophila melanogaster evolved for 150 generations on an extremely nutrient-poor larval diet. Comparison with control populations evolved on standard food revealed repeatable genomic differentiation between the two set of population, involving >3,000 candidate SNPs forming >100 independently evolving clusters. The candidate genomic regions were enriched in genes implicated in hormone, carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism, including some with known effects on fitness-related life-history traits. Rather than being close to fixation, a substantial fraction of candidate SNPs segregated at intermediate allele frequencies in all malnutrition-adapted populations. This, together with patterns of among-population variation in allele frequencies and estimates of Tajima's D, suggests that the poor diet results in balancing selection on some genomic regions. Our candidate genes for tolerance to larval malnutrition showed a high overlap with genes previously implicated in acute starvation resistance. However, adaptation to larval malnutrition in our study was associated with reduced tolerance to acute adult starvation. Thus, rather than reflecting synergy, the shared genomic architecture appears to mediate an evolutionary trade-off between tolerances to these two forms of nutritional stress.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1093/molbev/msab061
Web of Science ID

WOS:000671060500005

Author(s)
Kawecki, Tadeusz J.
Erkosar, Berra
Dupuis, Cindy
Hollis, Brian  
Stillwell, R. Craig
Kapun, Martin
Date Issued

2021-07-01

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Published in
Molecular Biology And Evolution
Volume

38

Issue

7

Start page

2732

End page

2749

Subjects

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

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Evolutionary Biology

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Genetics & Heredity

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experimental evolution

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genomics

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drosophila melanogaster

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larval malnutrition

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directional selection

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balancing selection

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single nucleotide polymorphisms

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nutritional stress

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natural-selection

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next-generation

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wide analysis

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egg-size

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evolution

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population

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resource

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protein

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

Available on Infoscience
July 31, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180359
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