Litcius/Paper detail

Limited Evidence for Parallel Evolution Among Desert-Adapted<i>Peromyscus</i>Deer Mice

Jocelyn P. Colella, Anna Tigano, Olga Dudchenko, Arina D. Omer, Ruqayya Khan, Ivan D. Bochkov, Erez Lieberman Aiden, Matthew D. MacManes

2021Journal of Heredity29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Warming climate and increasing desertification urge the identification of genes involved in heat and dehydration tolerance to better inform and target biodiversity conservation efforts. Comparisons among extant desert-adapted species can highlight parallel or convergent patterns of genome evolution through the identification of shared signatures of selection. We generate a chromosome-level genome assembly for the canyon mouse (Peromyscus crinitus) and test for a signature of parallel evolution by comparing signatures of selective sweeps across population-level genomic resequencing data from another congeneric desert specialist (Peromyscus eremicus) and a widely distributed habitat generalist (Peromyscus maniculatus), that may be locally adapted to arid conditions. We identify few shared candidate loci involved in desert adaptation and do not find support for a shared pattern of parallel evolution. Instead, we hypothesize divergent molecular mechanisms of desert adaptation among deer mice, potentially tied to species-specific historical demography, which may limit or enhance adaptation. We identify a number of candidate loci experiencing selective sweeps in the P. crinitus genome that are implicated in osmoregulation (Trypsin, Prostasin) and metabolic tuning (Kallikrein, eIF2-alpha kinase GCN2, APPL1/2), which may be important for accommodating hot and dry environmental conditions.

Topics & Concepts

PeromyscusBiologyEvolutionary biologyGeneralist and specialist speciesGenomeDeer mouseAdaptation (eye)BiodiversityPopulationEcologyExtant taxonHabitatGeneticsGeneSociologyNeuroscienceDemographyGenetic diversity and population structurePhysiological and biochemical adaptationsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change