Abstract

BackgroundTransposable elements (TEs) play an important role in genome function and evolution. It has been shown that TEs are a considerable source of adaptive changes in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster. Specifically, footprints of selection at the DNA level, the presence of population differentiation patterns across environmental gradients, and detailed mechanistic and fitness analyses of a few candidate adaptive TEs pointed to the role of TEs in environmental adaptation. However, whether the population differentiation patterns observed at large geographic scales can be replicated at a microgeographic scale has never been assessed before.ResultsIn this work, we explored the population patterns of putatively adaptive TEs at a micro-spatial scale level. We compared the frequencies of TEs, previously identified as putatively adaptive and putatively neutral, in populations collected in opposite slopes of the Evolution Canyon at Mt. Carmel in Israel separated by 200 m on average. However, the differentiation patterns previously observed across large geographic distances (2000–2200 km) were not replicated at the microscale level of the Evolution Canyon populations.ConclusionTE insertions previously associated with D. melanogaster environmental adaptation at a macro scale level do not play such a role at the microscale level of the Evolution Canyon populations. However, these results do not exclude a role of TEs in microgeographic adaptation because the dataset analyzed in this work is restricted to TEs identified in a single North American strain and as such is highly biased and incomplete.ReviewersThis article was reviewed by Eugene Koonin, Limsoon Wong and Fyodor Kondrashov.

Highlights

  • Transposable elements (TEs) play an important role in genome function and evolution

  • While putatively neutral TEs belong to families that are likely to be enriched for neutral insertions, putatively adaptive TEs belong to families that are subject to strong purifying selection and as such are more likely to be enriched for adaptive TEs [16, 28]

  • We first investigated whether frequencies of neutral TEs vary between South Facing Slope (SFS) populations compared to North Facing Slope (NFS) populations

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Summary

Introduction

Transposable elements (TEs) play an important role in genome function and evolution. It has been shown that TEs are a considerable source of adaptive changes in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster. Footprints of selection at the DNA level, the presence of population differentiation patterns across environmental gradients, and detailed mechanistic and fitness analyses of a few candidate adaptive TEs pointed to the role of TEs in environmental adaptation. Discarded for a long time as junk DNA, it is clear that a significant fraction of TEs play an important role in genome function and evolution [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Some of the putatively adaptive TEs showed parallel population differentiation patterns in the two continents. A correlation between the TE frequency and environmental variables such as temperature and rainfall was observed, further suggesting a role for these TEs in local environmental adaptation [16]

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