Genomic Basis of Adaptation to a Novel Precipitation Regime

Author:

Elfarargi Ahmed F1ORCID,Gilbault Elodie2,Döring Nina1,Neto Célia1,Fulgione Andrea1,Weber Andreas P M3ORCID,Loudet Olivier2,Hancock Angela M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Basis for Adaptation Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research , Cologne , Germany

2. Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin (IJPB) , Versailles , France

3. Institute of Plant Biochemistry, Cluster of Excellence on Plant Science (CEPLAS), Heinrich Heine University , Düsseldorf , Germany

Abstract

AbstractEnergy production and metabolism are intimately linked to ecological and environmental constraints across the tree of life. In plants, which depend on sunlight to produce energy, the link between primary metabolism and the environment is especially strong. By governing CO2 uptake for photosynthesis and transpiration, leaf pores, or stomata, couple energy metabolism to the environment and determine productivity and water-use efficiency (WUE). Although evolution is known to tune physiological traits to the local environment, we lack knowledge of the specific links between molecular and evolutionary mechanisms that shape this process in nature. Here, we investigate the evolution of stomatal conductance and WUE in an Arabidopsis population that colonized an island with a montane cloud scrubland ecosystem characterized by seasonal drought and fog-based precipitation. We find that stomatal conductance increases and WUE decreases in the colonizing population relative to its closest outgroup population from temperate North Africa. Genome-wide association mapping reveals a polygenic basis of trait variation, with a substantial contribution from a nonsynonymous single-nucleotide polymorphism in MAP KINASE 12 (MPK12 G53R), which explains 35% of the phenotypic variance in WUE in the island population. We reconstruct the spatially explicit evolutionary history of MPK12 53R on the island and find that this allele increased in frequency in the population due to positive selection as Arabidopsis expanded into the harsher regions of the island. Overall, these findings show how adaptation shaped quantitative eco-physiological traits in a new precipitation regime defined by low rainfall and high humidity.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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