Allele-specific Expression Reveals Multiple Paths to Highland Adaptation in Maize

Author:

Hu Haixiao1ORCID,Crow Taylor1,Nojoomi Saghi1,Schulz Aimee J2,Estévez-Palmas Juan M3,Hufford Matthew B2,Flint-Garcia Sherry45,Sawers Ruairidh6,Rellán-Álvarez Rubén37,Ross-Ibarra Jeffrey8ORCID,Runcie Daniel E1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California , Davis, CA

2. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University , Ames, IA

3. National Laboratory of Genomics for Biodiversity , Irapuato , México

4. United States Department of Agriculture—Agricultural Research Service , Columbia, MO

5. Division of Plant Sciences, University of Missouri , Columbia, MO

6. Department of Plant Science, The Pennsylvania State University, State College , PA

7. Department of Molecular and Structural Biochemistry, North Carolina State University , Raleigh, NC

8. Department of Evolution and Ecology, Center for Population Biology, and Genome Center, University of California , Davis, CA

Abstract

Abstract Maize is a staple food of smallholder farmers living in highland regions up to 4,000 m above sea level worldwide. Mexican and South American highlands are two major highland maize growing regions, and population genetic data suggest the maize's adaptation to these regions occurred largely independently, providing a case study for convergent evolution. To better understand the mechanistic basis of highland adaptation, we crossed maize landraces from 108 highland and lowland sites of Mexico and South America with the inbred line B73 to produce F1 hybrids and grew them in both highland and lowland sites in Mexico. We identified thousands of genes with divergent expression between highland and lowland populations. Hundreds of these genes show patterns of convergent evolution between Mexico and South America. To dissect the genetic architecture of the divergent gene expression, we developed a novel allele–specific expression analysis pipeline to detect genes with divergent functional cis-regulatory variation between highland and lowland populations. We identified hundreds of genes with divergent cis-regulation between highland and lowland landrace alleles, with 20 in common between regions, further suggesting convergence in the genes underlying highland adaptation. Further analyses suggest multiple mechanisms contribute to this convergence in gene regulation. Although the vast majority of evolutionary changes associated with highland adaptation were region specific, our findings highlight an important role for convergence at the gene expression and gene regulation levels as well.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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