Broad geographic sampling reveals the shared basis and environmental correlates of seasonal adaptation in Drosophila

Heather E. Machado(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Alan O. Bergland(University of Virginia), Ryan W. Taylor(Stanford University), Susanne Tilk(Stanford University), Emily L. Behrman(University of Pennsylvania), Kelly A. Dyer(University of Georgia), Daniel K. Fabian(University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna), Thomas Flatt(University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna), Josefa González(Universitat Pompeu Fabra), Talia L. Karasov(University of Utah), Bernard Kim(Stanford University), Iryna Kozeretska(Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv), Brian P. Lazzaro(Cornell University), Thomas Merritt(Laurentian University), John E. Pool(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Katherine R. O’Brien(University of Pennsylvania), Subhash Rajpurohit(University of Pennsylvania), Paula R. Roy(University of Kansas), Stephen W. Schaeffer(Pennsylvania State University), Svitlana Serga(Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv), Paul Schmidt(University of Pennsylvania), Dmitri A. Petrov(Stanford University)
eLife
June 22, 2021
Cited by 164Open Access
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Abstract

To advance our understanding of adaptation to temporally varying selection pressures, we identified signatures of seasonal adaptation occurring in parallel among Drosophila melanogaster populations. Specifically, we estimated allele frequencies genome-wide from flies sampled early and late in the growing season from 20 widely dispersed populations. We identified parallel seasonal allele frequency shifts across North America and Europe, demonstrating that seasonal adaptation is a general phenomenon of temperate fly populations. Seasonally fluctuating polymorphisms are enriched in large chromosomal inversions, and we find a broad concordance between seasonal and spatial allele frequency change. The direction of allele frequency change at seasonally variable polymorphisms can be predicted by weather conditions in the weeks prior to sampling, linking the environment and the genomic response to selection. Our results suggest that fluctuating selection is an important evolutionary force affecting patterns of genetic variation in Drosophila .


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