Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution,
Journal Year:
2018,
Volume and Issue:
6
Published: Aug. 20, 2018
The
duplication
of
an
entire
genome
is
no
small
affair.
Whole
(WGD)
a
dramatic
mutation
with
long-lasting
effects,
yet
it
occurs
repeatedly
in
all
eukaryotic
kingdoms.
Plants
are
particularly
rich
documented
WGDs,
recent
and
ancient
polyploidization
events
major
extant
lineages.
However,
challenges
immediately
following
WGD,
such
as
the
maintenance
stable
chromosome
segregation
or
detrimental
ecological
interactions
diploid
progenitors,
commonly
do
not
permit
establishment
nascent
polyploids.
Despite
these
immediate
issues
some
lineages
nevertheless
persist
thrive.
In
fact,
modelling
supports
patterns
adaptive
niche
differentiation
polyploids,
young
polyploids
often
invading
new
niches
leaving
their
progenitors
behind.
line
observations
polyploid
evolutionary
success,
work
documents
instant
physiological
consequences
WGD
associated
increased
dehydration
stress
tolerance
first-generation
autotetraploids.
Furthermore,
population
genetic
theory
predicts
both
short-
long-term
benefits
polyploidy
empirical
data
suggests
that
established
may
act
'sponges'
accumulating
allelic
diversity.
addition
to
variability,
introgression
other
tetraploid
lineages,
even
species,
further
increases
available
pool
variants
this,
advantages
still
questioned,
debate
over
idea
dead-end
carries
on.
Here
we
broadly
synthesise
newest
moving
this
forward.
Altogether,
evidence
if
early
barriers
overcome,
can
offer
instantaneous
fitness
opening
way
transformed
landscape
by
sampling
higher
diversity
alleles,
including
already
preadapted
local
environment.
This
context
intragenomic,
genomic,
modifications
can,
on
occasion,
edge.
Yet
long
run,
turn
into
hindrances,
without
drivers
novel
availability
agricultural
propagation,
restabilization
via
diploidization
will
begin
cycle
anew.
Science,
Journal Year:
2017,
Volume and Issue:
358(6363)
Published: Nov. 2, 2017
Our
planet
is
an
increasingly
urbanized
landscape,
with
over
half
of
the
human
population
residing
in
cities.
Despite
advances
urban
ecology,
we
do
not
adequately
understand
how
urbanization
affects
evolution
organisms,
nor
this
may
affect
ecosystems
and
health.
Here,
review
evidence
for
effects
on
microbes,
plants,
animals
that
inhabit
Urbanization
adaptive
nonadaptive
evolutionary
processes
shape
genetic
diversity
within
between
populations.
Rapid
adaptation
has
facilitated
success
some
native
species
areas,
but
it
also
allowed
pests
disease
to
spread
more
rapidly.
The
nascent
field
brings
together
efforts
response
environmental
change
while
developing
new
hypotheses
concerning
infrastructure
socioeconomic
activity.
next
generation
research
will
provide
critical
insight
into
importance
sustainable
interactions
humans
our
city
environments.
Oxford University Press eBooks,
Journal Year:
2017,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: July 13, 2017
Abstract
The
biological
diversity
of
the
planet
is
being
rapidly
depleted
due
to
direct
and
indirect
consequences
human
activity.
As
size
animal
plant
populations
decrease
fragmentation
increases,
loss
genetic
reduces
their
ability
adapt
changes
in
environment,
with
inbreeding
reduced
fitness
inevitable
for
many
species.
Many
small
isolated
are
going
extinct
unnecessarily.
In
cases,
such
can
be
genetically
rescued
by
gene
flow
into
them
from
another
population
within
species,
but
this
very
rarely
done.
This
novel
authoritative
book
addresses
issues
involved
management
fragmented
populations,
including
depression,
elevated
extinction
risk
augmentation
flow,
rescue,
causes
outbreeding
depression
predicting
its
occurrence,
desirability
implementation
translocations
cope
climate
change,
defining
diagnosing
species
conservation
purposes.
Nature Communications,
Journal Year:
2019,
Volume and Issue:
10(1)
Published: April 2, 2019
Abstract
A
complete
and
accurate
genome
sequence
provides
a
fundamental
tool
for
functional
genomics
DNA-informed
breeding.
Here,
we
assemble
high-quality
(contig
N50
of
6.99
Mb)
the
apple
anther-derived
homozygous
line
HFTH1,
including
22
telomere
sequences,
using
combination
PacBio
single-molecule
real-time
(SMRT)
sequencing,
chromosome
conformation
capture
(Hi-C)
optical
mapping.
In
comparison
to
Golden
Delicious
reference
genome,
identify
18,047
deletions,
12,101
insertions
14
large
inversions.
We
reveal
that
these
extensive
genomic
variations
are
largely
attributable
activity
transposable
elements.
Interestingly,
find
long
terminal
repeat
(LTR)
retrotransposon
insertion
upstream
MdMYB1
,
core
transcriptional
activator
anthocyanin
biosynthesis,
is
associated
with
red-skinned
phenotype.
This
finding
insights
into
molecular
mechanisms
underlying
red
fruit
coloration,
highlights
utility
this
assembly
in
deciphering
agriculturally
important
trait
apple.
Molecular Ecology,
Journal Year:
2018,
Volume and Issue:
28(6), P. 1537 - 1549
Published: July 13, 2018
Abstract
The
growing
knowledge
about
the
influence
of
transposable
elements
(
TE
s)
on
(a)
long‐term
genome
and
transcriptome
evolution;
(b)
genomic,
transcriptomic
epigenetic
variation
within
populations;
(c)
patterns
somatic
genetic
differences
in
individuals
continues
to
spur
interest
evolutionary
biologists
role
s
adaptive
evolution.
As
can
trigger
a
broad
range
molecular
population
with
potentially
severe
fitness
phenotypic
consequences
for
individuals,
different
mechanisms
evolved
keep
activity
check,
allowing
dynamic
interplay
between
host,
its
environment
Here,
we
review
evidence
changes
associated
basic
by
which
underlying
arise:
domestication,
exaptation,
host
gene
regulation,
(d)
‐mediated
formation
intronless
copies—so‐called
retrogenes
(e)
overall
increased
plasticity.
Furthermore,
discuss
how
stress‐dependent
incapacitation
defence
against
might
facilitate
responses
environmental
challenges
such
be
particularly
relevant
species
frequently
facing
novel
environments,
as
invasive,
pathogenic
or
parasitic
species.
PLoS Biology,
Journal Year:
2019,
Volume and Issue:
17(2), P. e3000128 - e3000128
Published: Feb. 4, 2019
The
genetic
architecture
of
adaptive
traits
is
key
importance
to
predict
evolutionary
responses.
Most
are
polygenic-i.e.,
result
from
selection
on
a
large
number
loci-but
most
molecularly
characterized
have
simple
basis.
This
discrepancy
best
explained
by
the
difficulty
in
detecting
small
allele
frequency
changes
(AFCs)
across
many
contributing
loci.
To
resolve
this,
we
use
laboratory
natural
detect
signatures
for
selective
sweeps
and
polygenic
adaptation.
We
exposed
10
replicates
Drosophila
simulans
population
new
temperature
regime
uncovered
an
trait
with
high
redundancy
among
beneficial
alleles.
observed
convergent
responses
several
phenotypes-e.g.,
fitness,
metabolic
rate,
fat
content-and
strong
response
(99
selected
alleles;
mean
s
=
0.059).
However,
each
these
alleles
increased
only
subset
evolving
replicates.
discerned
different
paradigms
based
heterogeneous
genomic
patterns
Redundancy
quantitative
(QT)
fitted
experimental
data
better
than
simulations
assuming
independent
sweeps.
Our
results
show
that
D.
populations
harbor
vast
reservoir
variation
facilitating
rapid
using
multiple
alternative
pathways
converging
at
phenotypic
optimum.
property
requires
modification
testing
strategies
beyond
search
convergence
molecular
level.
Evolutionary Applications,
Journal Year:
2018,
Volume and Issue:
12(3), P. 384 - 398
Published: Nov. 12, 2018
Urban
ecosystems
are
rapidly
expanding
throughout
the
world,
but
how
urban
growth
affects
evolutionary
ecology
of
species
living
in
areas
remains
largely
unknown.
has
advanced
our
understanding
development
cities
and
towns
change
environmental
conditions
alter
ecological
processes
patterns.
However,
despite
decades
research
ecology,
extent
to
which
urbanization
influences
eco-evolutionary
received
little
attention.
The
nascent
field
seeks
understand
evolution
populations,
those
changes
turn
influence
dynamics
communities,
ecosystems.
Following
a
brief
history
this
emerging
field,
Perspective
article
provides
agenda
roadmap
for
future
aimed
at
advancing
interplay
between
urban-dwelling
organisms.
We
identify
six
key
questions
that,
if
addressed,
would
significantly
increase
processes.
These
consider
nonadaptive
evolution,
natural
selection,
convergent
addition
role
heterogeneity
on
roles
phenotypic
plasticity
versus
adaptation
species'
abundance
cities.
Our
final
question
examines
impact
diversification.
For
each
these
questions,
we
suggest
avenues
that
will
help
advance
ecology.
Lastly,
highlight
importance
integrating
into
planning,
conservation
practice,
pest
management,
public
engagement.
Science,
Journal Year:
2018,
Volume and Issue:
362(6419), P. 1182 - 1186
Published: Dec. 7, 2018
DNA
methylation
promotes
transcription
generally
represses
transcription,
but
in
some
instances,
it
has
also
been
implicated
activation.
Harris
et
al.
identified
a
protein
complex
Arabidopsis
that
is
recruited
to
chromatin
by
methylation.
This
specifically
activated
the
of
genes
are
already
mildly
transcribed
had
no
effect
on
transcriptionally
silent
such
as
transposable
elements.
The
thereby
counteracts
repression
caused
transposon
insertion
neighboring
while
leaving
transposons
silent.
Thus,
balancing
both
repressive
and
activating
transcriptional
effects,
can
act
fine-tune
gene
expression.
Science
,
this
issue
p.
1182