Polygenic adaptation and negative selection across traits, years and environments in a long-lived plant species (Pinus pinaster Ait., Pinaceae)
DE MIGUEL, Marina
Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Ecophysiologie et Génomique Fonctionnelle de la Vigne [UMR EGFV]
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Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Ecophysiologie et Génomique Fonctionnelle de la Vigne [UMR EGFV]
DE MIGUEL, Marina
Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Ecophysiologie et Génomique Fonctionnelle de la Vigne [UMR EGFV]
Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Ecophysiologie et Génomique Fonctionnelle de la Vigne [UMR EGFV]
JARAMILLO-CORREA, Juan Pablo
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México = National Autonomous University of Mexico [UNAM]
< Reduce
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México = National Autonomous University of Mexico [UNAM]
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Molecular Ecology. 2022-01-25, vol. 31, n° 7, p. 2089-2105
Wiley
English Abstract
A decade of genetic association studies in multiple organisms suggests that most complex traits are polygenic; that is, they have a genetic architecture determined by numerous loci, each with small effect-size. Thus, ...Read more >
A decade of genetic association studies in multiple organisms suggests that most complex traits are polygenic; that is, they have a genetic architecture determined by numerous loci, each with small effect-size. Thus, determining the degree of polygenicity and its variation across traits, environments and time is crucial to understand the genetic basis of phenotypic variation. We applied multilocus approaches to estimate the degree of polygenicity of fitness-related traits in a long-lived plant (Pinus pinaster Ait., maritime pine) and to analyse this variation across environments and years. We evaluated five categories of fitness-related traits (survival, height, phenology, functional, and biotic-stress response) in a clonal common-garden network planted in contrasted environments (over 20,500 trees). Most of the analysed traits showed evidence of local adaptation based on Qst–Fst comparisons. We further observed a remarkably stable degree of polygenicity, averaging 6% (range of 0%–27%), across traits, environments and years. We detected evidence of negative selection, which could explain, at least partially, the high degree of polygenicity. Because polygenic adaptation can occur rapidly, our results suggest that current predictions on the capacity of natural forest tree populations to adapt to new environments should be revised, especially in the current context of climate change.Read less <
English Keywords
Heritability
Local adaptation
Maritime pine
Negative selection
Polygenicity
European Project
Adaptive BREEDING for productive, sustainable and resilient FORESTs under climate change
ANR Project
Initiative d'excellence de l'Université de Bordeaux - ANR-10-IDEX-0003
Origin
Hal imported