Abstract
AbstractArabidopsis thaliana has a wide elevational range and much of its diversity may be associated with local adaptation to elevation. We took a multi-regional view of the genomics and physiology of elevational adaptation in Arabidopsis, with >200 ecotypes, including 17 newly collected from Africa. We measured plant responses to potential high elevation stressors: low pCO2, high light, and night freezing, and conducted genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We found evidence of an adaptive cline in the western Mediterranean with low δ13C/early flowering at low elevations to high δ13C/late flowering at high elevations. By contrast, central Asian high elevation ecotypes flowered earlier. Antioxidants and pigmentation under high light and freezing showed regional differentiation but not elevational clines and may be associated with maladaptive plasticity. We found natural variation in non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) kinetics in response to chilling and fluctuating light, though with an unclear role in local adaptation. There were several candidate genetic loci mapped, including the ascorbate transporter PHT4;4 (associated with antioxidants) that influences the xanthophyll cycle, and may be involved in local adaptation to Morocco. Our study shows how the ecological strategies and genetic loci causing local adaptation to elevation change across regions and contribute to diversity in Arabidopsis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
7 articles.
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