Capturing the rapidly evolving study of adaptation

被引:6
|
作者
Fruciano, Carmelo [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Franchini, Paolo [4 ]
Jones, Julia C. [5 ]
机构
[1] Nat Res Council, Inst Marine Biol Resources & Biotechnol, Messina, Italy
[2] PSL Univ Paris, CNRS, Inst Biol, Ecole Normale Super IBENS, Portsmouth, England
[3] Univ Portsmouth, Sch Biol Sci, Portsmouth, Hants, England
[4] Univ Konstanz, Dept Biol, Constance, Germany
[5] Univ Coll Dublin, Sch Biol & Environm Sci, Dublin, Ireland
关键词
adaptation; genetic architecture; genomics; genomics of adaptation; parallel evolution; regulatory evolution; QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI; GENETIC ARCHITECTURE; POPULATION STRATIFICATION; ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION; COMPLEX TRAITS; DIVERGENCE; DIVERSIFICATION; STICKLEBACKS; EXPRESSION; SPECIATION;
D O I
10.1111/jeb.13871
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Research on the genomics of adaptation is rapidly changing. In the last few decades, progress in this area has been driven by methodological advances, not only in the way increasingly large amounts of molecular data are generated (e.g. with high-throughput sequencing), but also in the way these data are analysed. This includes a growing appreciation and quantitative treatment of covariation among units within the same data type (e.g. genes) or across data types (e.g. genes and phenotypes). The development and adoption of more and more integrative tools have resulted in richer and more interesting empirical work. This special issue - comprising methodological, empirical, and review papers - aims to capture a 'snapshot' of this rapidly evolving field. We discuss in particular three important themes in the study of adaptation: the genetic architecture of adaptive variation, protein-coding and regulatory changes, and parallel evolution. We highlight how more traditional key themes in the study of genetic architecture (e.g. the number of loci underlying adaptive traits and the distribution of their effects) are now being complemented by other factors (e.g. how patterns of linkage and number of loci interact to affect the ability to adapt). Similarly, apart from addressing the relative importance of protein-coding and regulatory changes, we now have the tools to look in-depth at specific types of regulatory variation to gain a clearer picture of regulatory networks. Finally, parallel evolution has always been central to the study of adaptation, but now we are often able to address the question of whether - and to what extent - parallelism at the organismal or phenotypic level is matched by parallelism at the genetic level. Perhaps most importantly, we can now determine what mechanisms are driving parallelism (or lack thereof) across levels of biological organization. All these recent methodological developments open up new directions for future studies of adaptive changes across traits, levels of biological organization, demographic contexts and time scales.
引用
收藏
页码:856 / 865
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Making a Difference: Adaptation of the Clinical Laboratory in Response to the Rapidly Evolving COVID-19 Pandemic
    Sahajpal, Nikhil S.
    Mondal, Ashis K.
    Ananth, Sudha
    Njau, Allan
    Fulzele, Sadanand
    Ahaluwalia, Pankaj
    Chaubey, Alka
    Hegde, Madhuri
    Rojiani, Amyn M.
    Kolhe, Ravindra
    ACADEMIC PATHOLOGY, 2021, 8
  • [2] RAPIDLY EVOLVING NATIVE AMEBIASIS
    MINICONI, P
    PERRIN, D
    LESCHALL.LR
    DELAJART.AY
    PRESSE MEDICALE, 1970, 78 (38): : 1677 - &
  • [3] Malaria: A Rapidly Evolving Story
    Scaplehorn, Niki
    CELL, 2011, 145 (05) : 641 - 641
  • [4] Rapidly Evolving Giant Dermatofibroma
    Lang, K. J.
    Lidder, S.
    Hofer, M.
    Graham, C.
    Taylor, A.
    CASE REPORTS IN MEDICINE, 2010, 2010
  • [5] Rapidly evolving tinea corporis
    Dorado Fernandez, Maria
    Salas Garcia, Tania
    Lopez Gomez, Alicia
    Isabel Arcas, Maria
    Ruiz Martinez, Javier
    Hernandez-Gil Sanchez, Jesus
    REVISTA IBEROAMERICANA DE MICOLOGIA, 2016, 33 (01): : 59 - 60
  • [6] European biotechnology evolving rapidly
    不详
    CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2000, 78 (17) : 12 - 12
  • [7] Rapidly Evolving Genes and Stress Adaptation of Two Desert Poplars, Populus euphratica and P. pruinosa
    Zhang, Jian
    Xie, Penghui
    Lascoux, Martin
    Meagher, Thomas R.
    Liu, Jianquan
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (06):
  • [9] Rapidly Evolving Technologies and Startup Exits
    Bowen, Donald E., III
    Fresard, Laurent
    Hoberg, Gerard
    MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2023, 69 (02) : 940 - 967
  • [10] Cancer chemoprevention: a rapidly evolving field
    Steward, W. P.
    Brown, K.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2013, 109 (01) : 1 - 7