3 research outputs found
Functional genomics of abiotic environmental adaptation in lacertid lizards and other vertebrates
Understanding the genomic basis of adaptation to different abiotic environments is important in the context of climate change and resulting short-term environmental fluctuations. Using functional and comparative genomics approaches, we here investigated whether signatures of genomic adaptation to a set of environmental parameters are concentrated in specific subsets of genes and functions in lacertid lizards and other vertebrates. We first identify 200 genes with signatures of positive diversifying selection from transcriptomes of 24 species of lacertid lizards and demonstrate their involvement in physiological and morphological adaptations to climate. To understand how functionally similar these genes are to previously predicted candidate functions for climate adaptation and to compare them with other vertebrate species, we then performed a meta-analysis of 1,100 genes under selection obtained from -omics studies in vertebrate species adapted to different abiotic factors. We found that the vertebrate gene set formed a tightly connected interactome, which was to 23% enriched in previously predicted functions of adaptation to climate, and to a large part (18%) involved in organismal stress response. We found a much higher degree of identical genes being repeatedly selected among different animal groups (43.6%), and of functional similarity and post-translational modifications than expected by chance, and no clear functional division between genes used for ectotherm and endotherm physiological strategies. In total, 171 out of 200 genes of Lacertidae were part of this network. These results highlight an important role of a comparatively small set of genes and their functions in environmental adaptation and narrow the set of candidate pathways and markers to be used in future research on adaptation and stress response related to climate change
Functional genomics of abiotic environmental adaptation in lacertid lizards and other vertebrates
Understanding the genomic basis of adaptation to different abiotic
environments is important in the context of climate change and resulting
short-term environmental fluctuations. Using functional and comparative
genomics approaches, we here investigated whether signatures of genomic
adaptation to a set of environmental parameters are concentrated in
specific subsets of genes and functions in lacertid lizards and other
vertebrates. We first identify 200 genes with signatures of positive
diversifying selection from transcriptomes of 24 species of lacertid
lizards and demonstrate their involvement in physiological and
morphological adaptations to climate. To understand how functionally
similar these genes are to previously predicted candidate functions for
climate adaptation and to compare them with other vertebrate species, we
then performed a meta-analysis of 1,100 genes under selection obtained
from -omics studies in vertebrate species adapted to different abiotic
factors. We found that the vertebrate gene set formed a tightly
connected interactome, which was to 23% enriched in previously
predicted functions of adaptation to climate, and to a large part (18%)
involved in organismal stress response. We found a much higher degree of
identical genes being repeatedly selected among different animal groups
(43.6%), and of functional similarity and post-translational
modifications than expected by chance, and no clear functional division
between genes used for ectotherm and endotherm physiological strategies.
In total, 171 out of 200 genes of Lacertidae were part of this network.
These results highlight an important role of a comparatively small set
of genes and their functions in environmental adaptation and narrow the
set of candidate pathways and markers to be used in future research on
adaptation and stress response related to climate change
Environmental temperatures shape thermal physiology as well as diversification and genome-wide substitution rates in lizards
International audienceClimatic conditions changing over time and space shape the evolution of organisms at multiple levels, including temperate lizards in the family Lacertidae. Here we reconstruct a dated phylogenetic tree of 262 lacertid species based on a supermatrix relying on novel phylogenomic datasets and fossil calibrations. Diversification of lacertids was accompanied by an increasing disparity among occupied bioclimatic niches, especially in the last 10 Ma, during a period of progressive global cooling. Temperate species also underwent a genome-wide slowdown in molecular substitution rates compared to tropical and desert-adapted lacertids. Evaporative water loss and preferred temperature are correlated with bioclimatic parameters, indicating physiological adaptations to climate. Tropical, but also some populations of cool-adapted species experience maximum temperatures close to their preferred temperatures. We hypothesize these species-specific physiological preferences may constitute a handicap to prevail under rapid global warming, and contribute to explaining local lizard extinctions in cool and humid climates