Widespread Parallel Evolution in Sticklebacks by Repeated Fixation of Ectodysplasin Alleles
Howard Hughes Medical Institute · University of British Columbia · +1 more institution
Abstract
Major phenotypic changes evolve in parallel in nature by molecular mechanisms that are largely unknown. Here, we use positional cloning methods to identify the major chromosome locus controlling armor plate patterning in wild threespine sticklebacks. Mapping, sequencing, and transgenic studies show that the Ectodysplasin (EDA) signaling pathway plays a key role in evolutionary change in natural populations and that parallel evolution of stickleback low-plated phenotypes at most freshwater locations around the world has occurred by repeated selection of Eda alleles derived from an ancestral low-plated haplotype that first appeared more than two million years ago. Members of this clade of low-plated alleles are…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
10- PFPamela F. ColosimoCorresponding
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of British Columbia, Stanford University
- KEKim E. Hosemann
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of British Columbia, Stanford University
- SBSarita Balabhadra
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of British Columbia, Stanford University
- GVGuadalupe Villarreal
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of British Columbia, Stanford University
- MDMark Dickson
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of British Columbia, Stanford University
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Stickleback
- Parallel evolution
- Allele
- Genetics
- Phenotype
- Evolutionary biology
- Locus (genetics)
- Life below water