Genomic and functional approaches reveal a case of adaptive introgression fromPopulus balsamifera(balsam poplar) inP. trichocarpa(black cottonwood)
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2016 papers
Abstract
Natural hybrid zones in forest trees provide systems to study the transfer of adaptive genetic variation by introgression. Previous landscape genomic studies in Populus trichocarpa, a keystone tree species, indicated genomic footprints of admixture with its sister species Populus balsamifera and identified candidate genes for local adaptation. Here, we explored the patterns of introgression and signals of local adaptation in P. trichocarpa and P. balsamifera, employing genome resequencing data from three chromosomes in pure species and admixed individuals from wild populations. Local ancestry analysis in admixed P. trichocarpa revealed a telomeric region in chromosome 15 with P. balsamifera ancestry, containing several candidate genes for local adaptation. Genomic analyses revealed signals of selection in certain genes in this region (e.g. PRR5, COMT1), and functional analyses based on gene expression variation and correlations with adaptive phenotypes suggest distinct functions of the introgressed alleles. In contrast, a block of genes in chromosome 12 paralogous to the introgressed region showed no signs of introgression or signatures of selection. We hypothesize that the introgressed region in chromosome 15 has introduced modular or cassette-like variation into P. trichocarpa. These linked adaptive mutations are associated with a block of genes in chromosome 15 that appear to have undergone neo- or subfunctionalization relative to paralogs in a duplicated region on chromosome 12 that show no signatures of adaptive variation. The association between P. balsamifera introgressed alleles with the expression of adaptive traits in P. trichocarpa supports the hypothesis that this is a case of adaptive introgression in an ecologically important foundation species.
Related Papers
- → Introgression fromPopulus balsamiferaunderlies adaptively significant variation and range boundaries inP. trichocarpa(2017)60 cited
- → Scale and direction of adaptive introgression between black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa) and balsam poplar (P. balsamifera)(2018)46 cited
- Susceptibilidad de híbridos de Populus spp. al ataque de áfidos y roya en tres localidades de Chile Susceptibility of Populus spp. hybrids to aphids and rusts at three localities of Chile(2011)
- Genome-Wide Analysis of BURP Domain-Containing Genes in Populus trichocarpa(2011)