Genetic underpinnings of arthropod community distributions in Populus trichocarpa

Author:

Simon Sandra J.1ORCID,Furches Anna23ORCID,Chhetri Hari14ORCID,Evans Luke5ORCID,Abeyratne Chanaka Roshan1ORCID,Jones Piet23ORCID,Wimp Gina6ORCID,Macaya‐Sanz David1ORCID,Jacobson Daniel23ORCID,Tschaplinski Timothy J.2ORCID,Tuskan Gerald A.2ORCID,DiFazio Stephen P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology West Virginia University Morgantown WV 26506 USA

2. Biosciences Division and Center for Bioenergy Innovation Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

3. The Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education University of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37996 USA

4. Computational Systems Biology Group Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

5. Institute for Behavioral Genetics University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO 80309 USA

6. Department of Biology Georgetown University Washington DC 20057 USA

Abstract

Summary Community genetics seeks to understand the mechanisms by which natural genetic variation in heritable host phenotypes can encompass assemblages of organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and many animals including arthropods. Prior studies that focused on plant genotypes have been unable to identify genes controlling community composition, a necessary step to predict ecosystem structure and function as underlying genes shift within plant populations. We surveyed arthropods within an association population of Populus trichocarpa in three common gardens to discover plant genes that contributed to arthropod community composition. We analyzed our surveys with traditional single‐trait genome‐wide association analysis (GWAS), multitrait GWAS, and functional networks built from a diverse set of plant phenotypes. Plant genotype was influential in structuring arthropod community composition among several garden sites. Candidate genes important for higher level organization of arthropod communities had broadly applicable functions, such as terpenoid biosynthesis and production of dsRNA binding proteins and protein kinases, which may be capable of targeting multiple arthropod species. We have demonstrated the ability to detect, in an uncontrolled environment, individual genes that are associated with the community assemblage of arthropods on a host plant, further enhancing our understanding of genetic mechanisms that impact ecosystem structure.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

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