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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2016-07-19
    Description: Adaptation of a complex trait often requires the accumulation of many modifications to finely tune its underpinning molecular components to novel environmental requirements. The investigation of cis -acting regulatory modifications can be used to pinpoint molecular systems partaking in such complex adaptations. Here, we identify cis -acting modifications with the help of an interspecific crossing scheme designed to distinguish modifications derived in each of the two sister species, Arabidopsis halleri and A. lyrata . Allele-specific expression levels were assessed in three environmental conditions chosen to reflect interspecific ecological differences: cold exposure, dehydration, and standard conditions. The functions described by Gene Ontology categories enriched in cis -acting mutations are markedly different in A. halleri and A. lyrata , suggesting that polygenic adaptation reshaped distinct polygenic molecular functions in the two species. In the A. halleri lineage, an excess of cis -acting changes affecting metal transport and homeostasis was observed, confirming that the well-known heavy metal tolerance of this species is the result of polygenic selection. In A. lyrata , we find a marked excess of cis -acting changes among genes showing a transcriptional response to cold stress in the outgroup species A. thaliana . The adaptive relevance of these changes will have to be validated. We finally observed that polygenic molecular functions enriched in derived cis -acting changes are more constrained at the amino acid level. Using the distribution of cis -acting variation to tackle the polygenic basis of adaptation thus reveals the contribution of mutations of small effect to Darwinian adaptation.
    Print ISSN: 0737-4038
    Electronic ISSN: 1537-1719
    Topics: Biology
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