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Genomic and phenotypic differentiation of Arabidopsis thaliana along altitudinal gradients in the North Italian Alps

Günther, Torsten (author)
Uppsala universitet,Evolution och utvecklingsbiologi,Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Stuttgart, Germany
Lampei, Christian (author)
Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Stuttgart, Germany.
Barilar, Ivan (author)
Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Stuttgart, Germany.
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Schmid, Karl J. (author)
Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Stuttgart, Germany.
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 (creator_code:org_t)
2016-07-02
2016
English.
In: Molecular Ecology. - : Wiley. - 0962-1083 .- 1365-294X. ; 25:15, s. 3574-3592
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Altitudinal gradients in mountain regions are short-range clines of different environmental parameters such as temperature or radiation. We investigated genomic and phenotypic signatures of adaptation to such gradients in five Arabidopsis thaliana populations from the North Italian Alps that originated from 580 to 2350m altitude by resequencing pools of 19-29 individuals from each population. The sample includes two pairs of low- and high-altitude populations from two different valleys. High-altitude populations showed a lower nucleotide diversity and negative Tajima's D values and were more closely related to each other than to low-altitude populations from the same valley. Despite their close geographic proximity, demographic analysis revealed that low- and high-altitude populations split between 260000 and 15000years before present. Single nucleotide polymorphisms whose allele frequencies were highly differentiated between low- and high-altitude populations identified genomic regions of up to 50kb length where patterns of genetic diversity are consistent with signatures of local selective sweeps. These regions harbour multiple genes involved in stress response. Variation among populations in two putative adaptive phenotypic traits, frost tolerance and response to light/UV stress was not correlated with altitude. Taken together, the spatial distribution of genetic diversity reflects a potentially adaptive differentiation between low- and high-altitude populations, whereas the phenotypic differentiation in the two traits investigated does not. It may resemble an interaction between adaptation to the local microhabitat and demographic history influenced by historical glaciation cycles, recent seed dispersal and genetic drift in local populations.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Biologi (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Biological Sciences (hsv//eng)

Keyword

adaptation
evolution
landscape genetics
natural selection and contemporary
population genetics - empirical

Publication and Content Type

ref (subject category)
art (subject category)

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Günther, Torsten
Lampei, Christia ...
Barilar, Ivan
Schmid, Karl J.
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NATURAL SCIENCES
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and Biological Scien ...
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Molecular Ecolog ...
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Uppsala University

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