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| DOI | 10.1111/MEC.12034 | ||||
| Año | 2013 | ||||
| Tipo | revisión |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
The study of parallel evolution facilitates the discovery of common rules of diversification. Here, we examine the repeated evolution of thick lips in Midas cichlid fishes (the Amphilophus citrinellus species complex)from two Great Lakes and two crater lakes in Nicaraguato assess whether similar changes in ecology, phenotypic trophic traits and gene expression accompany parallel trait evolution. Using next-generation sequencing technology, we characterize transcriptome-wide differential gene expression in the lips of wild-caught sympatric thick- and thin-lipped cichlids from all four instances of repeated thick-lip evolution. Six genes (apolipoprotein D, myelin-associated glycoprotein precursor, four-and-a-half LIM domain protein 2, calpain-9, GTPase IMAP family member 8-like and one hypothetical protein) are significantly underexpressed in the thick-lipped morph across all four lakes. However, other aspects of lips' gene expression in sympatric morphs differ in a lake-specific pattern, including the magnitude of differentially expressed genes (97-510). Generally, fewer genes are differentially expressed among morphs in the younger crater lakes than in those from the older Great Lakes. Body shape, lower pharyngeal jaw size and shape, and stable isotopes (d13C and d15N) differ between all sympatric morphs, with the greatest differentiation in the Great Lake Nicaragua. Some ecological traits evolve in parallel (those related to foraging ecology; e.g. lip size, body and head shape) but others, somewhat surprisingly, do not (those related to diet and food processing; e.g. jaw size and shape, stable isotopes). Taken together, this case of parallelism among thick- and thin-lipped cichlids shows a mosaic pattern of parallel and nonparallel evolution.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manousaki, Tereza | Mujer |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universität Konstanz - Alemania |
| 2 | Hull, Pincelli M. | - |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
YALE UNIV - Estados Unidos Universität Konstanz - Alemania Yale University - Estados Unidos |
| 3 | Kusche, Henrik | Hombre |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universität Konstanz - Alemania International Max Planck Research School for Organismal Biology - Alemania |
| 4 | Machado-Schiaffino, Gonzalo | Hombre |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universität Konstanz - Alemania |
| 5 | Franchini, Paolo | Hombre |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universität Konstanz - Alemania |
| 6 | HARROD, CHRISTOPHER JON | Hombre |
Max Planck Inst Limnol - Alemania
Queens Univ Belfast - Reino Unido Universidad de Antofagasta - Chile Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology - Alemania Queen's University Belfast - Reino Unido |
| 7 | Elmer, Kathryn R. | Mujer |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universidad de Antofagasta - Chile Universität Konstanz - Alemania University of Glasgow - Reino Unido College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences - Reino Unido |
| 8 | Meyer, Axel | Hombre |
Univ Konstanz - Alemania
Universität Konstanz - Alemania International Max Planck Research School for Organismal Biology - Alemania |
| Fuente |
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| Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft |
| European Research Council |
| Seventh Framework Programme |
| Max Planck Society |
| NSERC |
| German Excellence Initiative |
| Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship |
| Alexander von Humboldt |
| Yale Postdoctoral funds |
| DAAD (Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst) Research |
| Univ. Konstanz |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| This research was partially funded by grants of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to A. M. and funds of the German Excellence Initiative to the University of Konstanz for the GeCKo, the Genomics Center at the University of Konstanz. Funding by the European Research Council (to A. M.) through ERC-advanced grant 293700-GenAdap is gratefully acknowledged. Further support came from the Konstanz Graduate School Chemical Biology (KoRS-CB) to T. M. and A. M., a DAAD (Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst) Research and Yale Postdoctoral funds to P. M. H., an Alexander von Humboldt, NSERC fellowships and Univ. Konstanz Young Scholar's funding to K. R. E. and Alexander von Humboldt fellowship to G. M. S. C. H. thanks D. Tautz and the Max Planck Society for their kind financial support. We thank M. Barluenga and W. Salzburger who were part of the earlier collection trips to Nicaragua. We thank Ministerio del Anbiente y los Recursos Naturales (MARENA) for sample collection permits. We thank B. Ruter, S. Selent, C. Chang-Rudolf, T. Sonntag, M. L. Spreitzer and H. Recknagel for technical assistance and H. Gunter, M. L. Spreitzer, S. Fan and the three reviewers for helpful comments. |