Detecting the footprints of divergent selection in oaks with linked markers
Idioma
en
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Heredity. 2012, vol. 109, n° 6, p. 361-371
Nature Publishing Group
Resumen en inglés
Genome scans are increasingly used to study ecological speciation, providing a useful genome-wide perspective on divergent selection in the presence of gene flow. Here, we compare current approaches to detect footprints ...Leer más >
Genome scans are increasingly used to study ecological speciation, providing a useful genome-wide perspective on divergent selection in the presence of gene flow. Here, we compare current approaches to detect footprints of divergent selection in closely related species. We analyzed 192 individuals from two interfertile European temperate oak species using 30 nuclear microsatellites from eight linkage groups. These markers present little intraspecific differentiation and can be used in combination to assign individual genotypes to species. We first show that different outlier detection tests give somewhat different results, possibly due to model constraints. Second, using linkage information for these markers, we further characterize the signature of divergent selection in the presence of gene flow. In particular, we show that recombination estimates for regions with outlier markers are lower than those for a control region, in line with a prediction from ecological speciation theory. Most importantly, we show that analyses at the haplotype level can distinguish between truly divergent (bi-directional) selection and positive selection in one of the two species, offering a new and improved method for characterizing the speciation process.< Leer menos
Palabras clave
Quercus
Palabras clave en inglés
divergent selection
divergence hitchhiking
outlier detection
linkage disequilibrium
score tests
Orígen
Importado de HalCentros de investigación