Evolutionary Divergence and Radula Diversification in Two Ecomorphs from an Adaptive Radiation of Freshwater Snails

Author:

Hilgers Leon,Hartmann Stefanie,Pfaender Jobst,Lentge-Maaß NoraORCID,Marwoto Ristiyanti M.,von Rintelen Thomas,Hofreiter MichaelORCID

Abstract

(1) Background: Adaptive diversification of complex traits plays a pivotal role in the evolution of organismal diversity. In the freshwater snail genus Tylomelania, adaptive radiations were likely promoted by trophic specialization via diversification of their key foraging organ, the radula. (2) Methods: To investigate the molecular basis of radula diversification and its contribution to lineage divergence, we used tissue-specific transcriptomes of two sympatric Tylomelania sarasinorum ecomorphs. (3) Results: We show that ecomorphs are genetically divergent lineages with habitat-correlated abundances. Sequence divergence and the proportion of highly differentially expressed genes are significantly higher between radula transcriptomes compared to the mantle and foot. However, the same is not true when all differentially expressed genes or only non-synonymous SNPs are considered. Finally, putative homologs of some candidate genes for radula diversification (hh, arx, gbb) were also found to contribute to trophic specialization in cichlids and Darwin’s finches. (4) Conclusions: Our results are in line with diversifying selection on the radula driving Tylomelania ecomorph divergence and indicate that some molecular pathways may be especially prone to adaptive diversification, even across phylogenetically distant animal groups.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference94 articles.

1. African cichlid fish: a model system in adaptive radiation research

2. The genomics of organismal diversification illuminated by adaptive radiations

3. Evolution of Character Displacement in Darwin's Finches

4. The Ecology of Adaptive Radiation;Schluter,2000

5. On the Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection: Or, The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life;Darwin,1859

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