A large-effect fitness trade-off across environments is explained by a single mutation affecting cold acclimation
Identifying the genetic basis of local adaptation and fitness trade-offs across environments is a central goal of evolutionary biology. Cold acclimation is an adaptive plastic response for surviving seasonal freezing, and costs of acclimation may be a general mechanism for fitness trade-offs across...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-02, Vol.121 (6), p.e2317461121 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Identifying the genetic basis of local adaptation and fitness trade-offs across environments is a central goal of evolutionary biology. Cold acclimation is an adaptive plastic response for surviving seasonal freezing, and costs of acclimation may be a general mechanism for fitness trade-offs across environments in temperate zone species. Starting with locally adapted ecotypes of
from Italy and Sweden, we examined the fitness consequences of a naturally occurring functional polymorphism in
. This gene encodes a transcription factor that is a major regulator of cold-acclimated freezing tolerance and resides within a locus responsible for a genetic trade-off for long-term mean fitness. We estimated the consequences of alternate genotypes of
on 5-y mean fitness and fitness components at the native field sites by comparing near-isogenic lines with alternate genotypes of
to their genetic background ecotypes. The effects of
were validated at the nucleotide level using gene-edited lines in the native genetic backgrounds grown in simulated parental environments. The foreign
genotype in the local genetic background reduced long-term mean fitness in Sweden by more than 10%, primarily via effects on survival. In Italy, fitness was reduced by more than 20%, primarily via effects on fecundity. At both sites, the effects were temporally variable and much stronger in some years. The gene-edited lines confirmed that
encodes the causal variant underlying this genetic trade-off. Additionally, we demonstrated a substantial fitness cost of cold acclimation, which has broad implications for potential maladaptive responses to climate change. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 1091-6490 |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.2317461121 |