Litcius/Paper detail

High-altitude adaptation is accompanied by strong signatures of purifying selection in the mitochondrial genomes of three Andean waterfowl

Allie M. Graham, Philip Lavretsky, Robert E. Wilson, Kevin G. McCracken

2024PLoS ONE11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Evidence from a variety of organisms points to convergent evolution on the mitochondria associated with a physiological response to oxygen deprivation or temperature stress, including mechanisms for high-altitude adaptation. Here, we examine whether demography and/or selection explains standing mitogenome nucleotide diversity in high-altitude adapted populations of three Andean waterfowl species: yellow-billed pintail (Anas georgica), speckled teal (Anas flavirostris), and cinnamon teal (Spatula cyanoptera). We compared a total of 60 mitogenomes from each of these three duck species (n = 20 per species) across low and high altitudes and tested whether part(s) or all of the mitogenome exhibited expected signatures of purifying selection within the high-altitude populations of these species. Historical effective population sizes (Ne) were inferred to be similar between high- and low-altitude populations of each species, suggesting that selection rather than genetic drift best explains the reduced genetic variation found in mitochondrial genes of high-altitude populations compared to low-altitude populations of the same species. Specifically, we provide evidence that establishment of these three Andean waterfowl species in the high-altitude environment, coincided at least in part with a persistent pattern of negative purifying selection acting on oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) function of the mitochondria. Our results further reveal that the extent of gene-specific purifying selection has been greatest in the speckled teal, the species with the longest history of high-altitude occupancy.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyNegative selectionAdaptation (eye)Effects of high altitude on humansAltitude (triangle)WaterfowlMitochondrial DNANucleotide diversityPopulationEvolutionary biologyAnseriformesEffective population sizeEcologyZoologyGenetic variationGenomeGeneticsGeneHabitatGeometrySociologyNeuroscienceMathematicsGenotypeDemographyHaplotypeAnatomyHigh Altitude and HypoxiaPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsBat Biology and Ecology Studies