The transcriptional state and chromatin landscape of cichlid jaw shape variation across species and environments

Author:

Tetrault Emily1,Swenson John2,Aaronson Ben3,Marcho Chelsea4,Albertson R. Craig3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program in Molecular and Cell Biology University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

2. Graduate Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

3. Biology Department University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractAdaptive phenotypes are shaped by a combination of genetic and environmental forces, but how they interact remains poorly understood. Here, we utilize the cichlid oral jaw apparatus to better understand these gene‐by‐environment effects. First, we employed RNA‐seq in bony and ligamentous tissues important for jaw opening to identify differentially expressed genes between species and across foraging environments. We used two Lake Malawi species adapted to different foraging habitats along the pelagic–benthic ecomorphological axis. Our foraging treatments were designed to force animals to employ either suction or biting/scraping, which broadly mimic pelagic or benthic modes of feeding. We found a large number of differentially expressed genes between species, and while we identified relatively few differences between environments, species differences were far more pronounced when they were challenged with a pelagic versus benthic foraging mode. Expression data carried the signature of genetic assimilation, and implicated cell cycle regulation in shaping the jaw across species and environments. Next, we repeated the foraging experiment and performed ATAC‐seq procedures on nuclei harvested from the same tissues. Cross‐referencing results from both analyses revealed subsets of genes that were both differentially expressed and differentially accessible. This reduced dataset implicated notable candidate genes including the Hedgehog effector,KIAA0586and the ETS transcription factor,etv4, which connects environmental stress and craniofacial morphogenesis. Taken together, these data provide novel insights into the epigenetic, genetic and cellular bases of species‐ and environment‐specific bone shapes.

Funder

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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