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The genomic basis of adaptive evolution in threespine sticklebacks
Authors:Jones Felicity C  Grabherr Manfred G  Chan Yingguang Frank  Russell Pamela  Mauceli Evan  Johnson Jeremy  Swofford Ross  Pirun Mono  Zody Michael C  White Simon  Birney Ewan  Searle Stephen  Schmutz Jeremy  Grimwood Jane  Dickson Mark C  Myers Richard M  Miller Craig T  Summers Brian R  Knecht Anne K  Brady Shannon D  Zhang Haili  Pollen Alex A  Howes Timothy  Amemiya Chris;Broad Institute Genome Sequencing Platform & Whole Genome Assembly Team  Baldwin Jen  Bloom Toby  Jaffe David B  Nicol Robert  Wilkinson Jane  Lander Eric S  Di Palma Federica  Lindblad-Toh Kerstin  Kingsley David M
Institution:Department of Developmental Biology, Beckman Center B300, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford California 94305, USA.
Abstract:Marine stickleback fish have colonized and adapted to thousands of streams and lakes formed since the last ice age, providing an exceptional opportunity to characterize genomic mechanisms underlying repeated ecological adaptation in nature. Here we develop a high-quality reference genome assembly for threespine sticklebacks. By sequencing the genomes of twenty additional individuals from a global set of marine and freshwater populations, we identify a genome-wide set of loci that are consistently associated with marine-freshwater divergence. Our results indicate that reuse of globally shared standing genetic variation, including chromosomal inversions, has an important role in repeated evolution of distinct marine and freshwater sticklebacks, and in the maintenance of divergent ecotypes during early stages of reproductive isolation. Both coding and regulatory changes occur in the set of loci underlying marine-freshwater evolution, but regulatory changes appear to predominate in this well known example of repeated adaptive evolution in nature.
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