Abstract

Exploring the genomic architecture of species and populations divergence aids understanding how lineages evolve and adapt, and ultimately can show the repeatability of evolutionary processes. Yet, the genomic signatures associated with divergence are still relatively unexplored, leading to a knowledge gap on whether species divergence ultimately differs in its genetic architecture from divergence at other spatial scales (i.e., populations, ecotypes). Our goal in this research was to determine whether genomic islands of speciation are more prone to harbor within-species differentiation due to genomic features, suppressed recombination, smaller effective population size or increased drift, across repeated hierarchically nested levels of divergence. We used two species of Phaseolus beans with strong genepool and population sub-structure produced by multiple independent domestications each especially in Andean and Mesoamerican / Middle American geographies. We genotyped 22,531 GBS-derived SNP markers in 209 individuals of wild and cultivated Phaseolus vulgaris and Phaseolus lunatus. We identified six regions for species-associated divergence. Out of these divergence peaks, 21% were recovered in the four within-species between-genepool comparisons and in the five within-genepool wild-cultivated comparisons (some of the latter did retrieve genuine signatures of the well described multiple domestication syndromes). However, genomic regions with overall high relative differentiation (measured by FST) coincided with regions of low SNP density and regions of elevated delta divergence between-genepools (ΔDiv), independent of the scale of divergence. The divergence in chromosome Pv10 further coincided with a between-species pericentric inversion. These convergences suggest that shared variants are being recurrently fixed at replicated regions of the genome, and in a similar manner across different hierarchically nested levels of divergence, likely as result of genomic features that make certain regions more prone to accumulate islands of speciation and within-species divergence. In summary, neighboring signatures of speciation, adaptation and domestication in Phaseolus beans are influenced by ubiquitous genomic constrains, which may continue to fortuitously shape genomic differentiation at various others scales of divergence.

Highlights

  • Exploring the genomic architecture of species’ and populations’ divergence helps understanding how lineages evolve and adapt, and how repeatable evolutionary processes are (Gould, 1990; Lobkovsky and Koonin, 2012; Tenaillon et al, 2012)

  • We have found that genomic islands of speciation are not necessarily more prone to harbor within-species divergence, yet subjacent genomic constrains could still be shaping parallel divergence at broader genomic scales

  • We first discuss some evidence of parallelisms in the genetic adaptations to the Mesoamerican and Andean environments in common and Lima beans resulting from shared variation

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Summary

Introduction

Exploring the genomic architecture of species’ and populations’ divergence helps understanding how lineages evolve and adapt, and how repeatable evolutionary processes are (Gould, 1990; Lobkovsky and Koonin, 2012; Tenaillon et al, 2012). A knowledge gap on whether species divergence differs in its genetic architecture from divergence at other spatial scales (i.e., populations, ecotypes) still remains. Parallel selection on shared genetic variation, like in the well-described Atp1a1, EDA and Pitx genes in sticklebacks (Jones et al, 2012a,b), should lead to low divergence within populations and across replicates, in the exact genomic regions where equivalent variants are selected at each contrasting population (Roesti et al, 2014). Discerning among gene flow, genetic drift and selection as the cause of parallel genomic divergence is possible as long as there is some degree of replication considered in the sampling of contrasting populations

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