Beyond QTL Cloning

نویسندگان

  • Jill T. Anderson
  • Thomas Mitchell-Olds
چکیده

Natural selection sculpts phenotypes to enable adaptation to local conditions. Biologists have long been interested in the phenotypic and molecular response to selection, but we still know little about the genetic basis of adaptation. With continuing improvements in molecular technologies, we now have the tools to investigate the genes that underlie ecologically important traits. Assessing the geographic distribution of allelic variation at these loci can point to the agents of selection, if different alleles are advantageous in contrasting environmental conditions [1–3]. In theory, predictable patterns of clinal variation in allele frequencies can arise from divergent selection across environmental gradients [1], although demographic factors may complicate identification of adaptive changes [4,5]. Few studies have linked geographic variation in allele frequencies with variation in phenotypes (but see [6–8]). Studies of clinal variation are especially powerful when a causative gene underlying a key phenotype has already been identified. For example, geographic clines in flowering time are associated with variation at flowering time genes in the model species Arabidopsis thaliana [2,3]. Many studies focus on traits that vary on a broad geographic scale, for which latitude, longitude, or elevation can be used as a proxy for environment. Other environmental conditions are more difficult to measure at the landscape level, and have therefore often been ignored in studies of the geographic distribution of genetic and phenotypic variation. In this issue of PLoS Genetics, Baxter et al. [9] present an elegant study of the geographic variation in salinity tolerance, and allelic variation at the sodium transport gene AtHKT1;1 in European populations of A. thaliana. In a laboratory experiment, Baxter and colleagues grew Arabidopsis accessions in non-saline soil (without elevated Na) and found substantial variation in the accumulation of sodium in leaf tissue, which indicates tolerance to saline soils. Furthermore, foliar Na of these genotypes decreased with distance from the collection site to nearby regions with saline soils [9]. This geographic pattern suggests that the phenotype (salinity tolerance) could be a direct evolutionary response to a stressful environmental condition (saline soils). A genome-wide association study revealed a significant association between the AtHKT1;1 candidate gene and foliar Na accumulation [9], corroborating results of previous studies [10,11]. Baxter et al. [9] conducted additional crosses between accessions with high and low foliar Na, in conjunction with gene expression studies, and found that elevated salinity tolerance is associated with hypofunctional alleles of AtHKT1;1. These molecular data can be brought to bear on the geographic cline in salinity tolerance: accessions with a hypofunctional allele at AtHKT1;1 occur in areas where the soil is likely to be saline. Baxter and colleagues [9] conclude that the geographic cline in AtHKT1;1 is an adaptive response to variation in soil salinity. In addition, human disturbance could contribute to this allelic cline, as the genotype associated with salt tolerance is distributed primarily near major ports and could have been dispersed along shipping lanes (see Figure 1 in [9]). Additional sampling, as well as ecological studies and whole-genome analysis of SNP geography, may clarify the relative importance of natural selection and possible humanmediated gene flow in the geographic distribution of alleles at AtHKT1;1.

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 6  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2010