Molecular Adaptation during Adaptive Radiation in the Hawaiian Endemic Genus Schiedea
Open Access
- 20 December 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 1 (1) , e8
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000008
Abstract
“Explosive” adaptive radiations on islands remain one of the most puzzling evolutionary phenomena. The rate of phenotypic and ecological adaptations is extremely fast during such events, suggesting that many genes may be under fairly strong selection. However, no evidence for adaptation at the level of protein coding genes was found, so it has been suggested that selection may work mainly on regulatory elements. Here we report the first evidence that positive selection does operate at the level of protein coding genes during rapid adaptive radiations. We studied molecular adaptation in Hawaiian endemic plant genus Schiedea (Caryophyllaceae), which includes closely related species with a striking range of morphological and ecological forms, varying from rainforest vines to woody shrubs growing in desert-like conditions on cliffs. Given the remarkable difference in photosynthetic performance between Schiedea species from different habitats, we focused on the “photosynthetic” Rubisco enzyme, the efficiency of which is known to be a limiting step in plant photosynthesis. We demonstrate that the chloroplast rbcL gene, encoding the large subunit of Rubisco enzyme, evolved under strong positive selection in Schiedea. Adaptive amino acid changes occurred in functionally important regions of Rubisco that interact with Rubisco activase, a chaperone which promotes and maintains the catalytic activity of Rubisco. Interestingly, positive selection acting on the rbcL might have caused favorable cytotypes to spread across several Schiedea species. We report the first evidence for adaptive changes at the DNA and protein sequence level that may have been associated with the evolution of photosynthetic performance and colonization of new habitats during a recent adaptive radiation in an island plant genus. This illustrates how small changes at the molecular level may change ecological species performance and helps us to understand the molecular bases of extremely fast rate of adaptation during island adaptive radiations.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- CUPSAT: prediction of protein stability upon point mutationsNucleic Acids Research, 2006
- The tortoise and the hare II: relative utility of 21 noncoding chloroplast DNA sequences for phylogenetic analysisAmerican Journal of Botany, 2005
- Effects of Purifying and Adaptive Selection on Regional Variation in Human mtDNAScience, 2004
- The causes of phylogenetic conflict in a classicDrosophilaspecies groupProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2003
- Molecular phylogenetics of Caryophyllales based on nuclear 18S rDNA and plastid rbcL, atpB, and matK DNA sequencesAmerican Journal of Botany, 2002
- Gene Trees in Species TreesSystematic Biology, 1997
- Splicing and intron-internal RNA editing of trnK-matK transcripts in barley plastids: support for MatK as an essential splice factorJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- SWISS‐MODEL and the Swiss‐Pdb Viewer: An environment for comparative protein modelingElectrophoresis, 1997
- Universal primers for amplification of three non-coding regions of chloroplast DNAPlant Molecular Biology, 1991
- Crystallographic analysis of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase from spinach at 2·4 Å resolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990