Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution, Complutense University of Madrid, 28040, Madrid, Spain.
Present address: Department of Neuroscience, Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center & Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, 40536, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2019 May 9;20(1):354. doi: 10.1186/s12864-019-5694-1.
Evolution leaves an imprint in species through genetic change. At the molecular level, evolutionary changes can be explored by studying ratios of nucleotide substitutions. The interplay among molecular evolution, derived phenotypes, and ecological ranges can provide insights into adaptive radiations. Caecilians (order Gymnophiona), probably the least known of the major lineages of vertebrates, are limbless tropical amphibians, with adults of most species burrowing in soils (fossoriality). This enigmatic order of amphibians are very distinct phenotypically from other extant amphibians and likely from the ancestor of Lissamphibia, but little to nothing is known about the molecular changes underpinning their radiation. We hypothesised that colonization of various depths of tropical soils and of freshwater habitats presented new ecological opportunities to caecilians.
A total of 8540 candidate groups of orthologous genes from transcriptomic data of five species of caecilian amphibians and the genome of the frog Xenopus tropicalis were analysed in order to investigate the genetic machinery behind caecilian diversification. We found a total of 168 protein-coding genes with signatures of positive selection at different evolutionary times during the radiation of caecilians. The majority of these genes were related to functional elements of the cell membrane and extracellular matrix with expression in several different tissues. The first colonization of the tropical soils was connected to the largest number of protein-coding genes under positive selection in our analysis. From the results of our study, we highlighted molecular changes in genes involved in perception, reduction-oxidation processes, and aging that likely were involved in the adaptation to different soil strata.
The genes inferred to have been under positive selection provide valuable insights into caecilian evolution, potentially underpin adaptations of caecilians to their extreme environments, and contribute to a better understanding of fossorial adaptations and molecular evolution in vertebrates.
进化通过遗传变化在物种中留下痕迹。在分子水平上,可以通过研究核苷酸替换比例来探索进化变化。分子进化、衍生表型和生态范围的相互作用可以为适应辐射提供深入了解。蚓螈(蚓螈目)可能是脊椎动物主要谱系中最不为人知的一种,是无肢热带两栖动物,大多数物种的成年个体在土壤中挖掘洞穴(穴居性)。这种神秘的两栖动物在表型上与其他现存的两栖动物非常不同,也可能与 Lissamphibia 的祖先不同,但对于支持它们辐射的分子变化几乎一无所知。我们假设,各种热带土壤深度和淡水生境的殖民化为蚓螈提供了新的生态机会。
为了研究蚓螈多样化背后的遗传机制,我们从 5 种蚓螈两栖动物的转录组数据和青蛙 Xenopus tropicalis 的基因组中分析了总共 8540 个同源基因候选组。我们总共发现了 168 个具有正选择特征的蛋白质编码基因,这些基因在蚓螈辐射的不同进化时期都有。这些基因大多数与细胞膜和细胞外基质的功能元件有关,在几种不同的组织中有表达。我们的分析表明,对热带土壤的首次殖民与正选择下的蛋白质编码基因数量最多有关。从我们的研究结果中,我们突出了参与感知、氧化还原过程和衰老的基因中的分子变化,这些变化可能与对不同土壤层的适应有关。
推断出的受正选择影响的基因为蚓螈进化提供了有价值的见解,可能为蚓螈对极端环境的适应提供了基础,并有助于更好地理解穴居适应和脊椎动物的分子进化。