Back to Search Start Over

Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Signature of Adaptation to Landscape Fragmentation

Authors :
Liisa Holm
Suvi Saarnio
Minna Taipale
Ilkka Hanski
Panu Somervuo
Jukka Kohonen
Annukka Ruokolainen
Petri Auvinen
Virpi Ahola
Lars Paulin
Jouni Kvist
Jukka Corander
Jukka Sirén
Suvi Ikonen
Mikko J. Frilander
Patrik Koskinen
Anne Duplouy
Institute of Biotechnology
Biosciences
Centre of Excellence in Metapopulation Research
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Lammi Biological Station
Life-history Evolution Research Group
DNA Sequencing and Genomics
Genetics
Bioinformatics
Computational genomics
Research Programs Unit
Medicum
Genome-Scale Biology (GSB) Research Program
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Biostatistics Helsinki
Minor spliceosome
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 7, p e101467 (2014), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We characterize allelic and gene expression variation between populations of the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) from two fragmented and two continuous landscapes in northern Europe. The populations exhibit significant differences in their life history traits, e.g. butterflies from fragmented landscapes have higher flight metabolic rate and dispersal rate in the field, and higher larval growth rate, than butterflies from continuous landscapes. In fragmented landscapes, local populations are small and have a high risk of local extinction, and hence the long-term persistence at the landscape level is based on frequent re-colonization of vacant habitat patches, which is predicted to select for increased dispersal rate. Using RNA-seq data and a common garden experiment, we found that a large number of genes (1,841) were differentially expressed between the landscape types. Hexamerin genes, the expression of which has previously been shown to have high heritability and which correlate strongly with larval development time in the Glanville fritillary, had higher expression in fragmented than continuous landscapes. Genes that were more highly expressed in butterflies from newly-established than old local populations within a fragmented landscape were also more highly expressed, at the landscape level, in fragmented than continuous landscapes. This result suggests that recurrent extinctions and re-colonizations in fragmented landscapes select a for specific expression profile. Genes that were significantly up-regulated following an experimental flight treatment had higher basal expression in fragmented landscapes, indicating that these butterflies are genetically primed for frequent flight. Active flight causes oxidative stress, but butterflies from fragmented landscapes were more tolerant of hypoxia. We conclude that differences in gene expression between the landscape types reflect genomic adaptations to landscape fragmentation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 7, p e101467 (2014), PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d31f59c7acb7cc28b1f55c5aa6bf11c2