Identifying footprints of directional and balancing selection in marine and freshwater three‐spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) populations
- 19 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Ecology
- Vol. 17 (15) , 3565-3582
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294x.2008.03714.x
Abstract
Natural selection is expected to leave an imprint on the neutral polymorphisms at the adjacent genomic regions of a selected gene. While directional selection tends to reduce within-population genetic diversity and increase among-population differentiation, the reverse is expected under balancing selection. To identify targets of natural selection in the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) genome, 103 microsatellite and two indel markers including expressed sequence tags (EST) and quantitative trait loci (QTL)-associated loci, were genotyped in four freshwater and three marine populations. The results indicated that a high proportion of loci (14.7%) might be affected by balancing selection and a lower proportion (2.8%) by directional selection. The strongest signatures of directional selection were detected in a microsatellite locus and two indel markers located in the intronic regions of the Eda-gene coding for the number of lateral plates. Yet, other microsatellite loci previously found to be informative in QTL-mapping studies revealed no signatures of selection. Two novel microsatellite loci (Stn12 and Stn90) located in chromosomes I and VIII, respectively, showed signals of directional selection and might be linked to genomic regions containing gene(s) important for adaptive divergence. Although the coverage of the total genomic content was relatively low, the predominance of balancing selection signals is in agreement with the contention that balancing, rather than directional selection is the predominant mode of selection in the wild.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Combining population genomics and quantitative genetics: finding the genes underlying ecologically important traitsHeredity, 2007
- Ensembl 2007Nucleic Acids Research, 2006
- Genomic signatures of positive selection in humans and the limits of outlier approachesGenome Research, 2006
- How reliable are empirical genomic scans for selective sweeps?Genome Research, 2006
- Balancing Selection and Its Effects on Sequences in Nearby Genome RegionsPLoS Genetics, 2006
- The genetic theory of adaptation: a brief historyNature Reviews Genetics, 2005
- The Genetic Architecture of Parallel Armor Plate Reduction in Threespine SticklebacksPLoS Biology, 2004
- Statistical significance for genomewide studiesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- The genetic architecture of divergence between threespine stickleback speciesNature, 2001