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The genetic basis of a recent transition to live-bearing in marine snails

Sean Stankowski, Zuzanna B. Zagrodzka, Martin D. Garlovsky, Arka Pal, Daria Shipilina, Diego Garcia Castillo, Hila Lifchitz, Alan Le Moan, Erica H. Leder, James Reeve, Kerstin Johannesson, Anja M. Westram, Roger K. Butlin

2024Science36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Key innovations are fundamental to biological diversification, but their genetic basis is poorly understood. A recent transition from egg-laying to live-bearing in marine snails ( Littorina spp.) provides the opportunity to study the genetic architecture of an innovation that has evolved repeatedly across animals. Individuals do not cluster by reproductive mode in a genome-wide phylogeny, but local genealogical analysis revealed numerous small genomic regions where all live-bearers carry the same core haplotype. Candidate regions show evidence for live-bearer–specific positive selection and are enriched for genes that are differentially expressed between egg-laying and live-bearing reproductive systems. Ages of selective sweeps suggest that live-bearer–specific alleles accumulated over more than 200,000 generations. Our results suggest that new functions evolve through the recruitment of many alleles rather than in a single evolutionary step.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEvolutionary biologyHaplotypeAlleleDiversification (marketing strategy)GeneticsGeneBusinessMarketingMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture StudiesMollusks and Parasites StudiesMarine Biology and Ecology Research
The genetic basis of a recent transition to live-bearing in marine snails | Litcius