Population Genomics of Premature Termination Codons in Cavefish With Substantial Trait Loss.

Roback EY; Ferrufino E; Moran RL; Shennard D; Mulliniks C; Gallop J; Weagley J; Miller J; Fily Y; Ornelas-García CP; Rohner N; Kowalko JE; McGaugh SE

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Loss-of-function alleles are a pertinent source of genetic variation with the potential to contribute to adaptation. Cave-adapted organisms exhibit striking loss of ancestral traits such as eyes and pigment, suggesting that loss-of-function alleles may play an outsized role in these systems. Here, we leverage 141 whole genome sequences to evaluate the evolutionary history and adaptive potential of single nucleotide premature termination codons (PTCs) in Mexican tetra. We find that cave populations contain significantly more PTCs at high frequency than surface populations. We also find that PTCs occur more frequently in genes with inherent relaxed evolutionary constraint relative to the rest of the genome. Using SLiM to simulate PTC evolution in a cavefish population, we show that the smaller population size and increased genetic drift is sufficient to account for the observed increase in PTC frequency in cave populations without positive selection. Using CRISPR-Cas9, we show that mutation of one of these genes, pde6c, produces phenotypes in surface Mexican tetra that mimic cave-derived traits. Finally, we identify a small subset of candidate genes that contain high-frequency PTCs in cave populations, occur within selective sweeps, and may contribute to beneficial traits such as reduced energy expenditure, suggesting that a handful of PTCs may be adaptive. Overall, our work provides a rare characterization of PTCs across wild populations and finds that they may have an important role in loss-of-function phenotypes, contributing to a growing body of literature showing genome evolution through relaxed constraint in subterranean organisms.

Details about the publication

JournalMolecular Biology and Evolution (Mol Biol Evol)
Volume42
Issue2
StatusPublished
Release year2025 (03/02/2025)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1093/molbev/msaf012
KeywordsAnimals; Caves; Codon, Nonsense; Evolution, Molecular; Selection, Genetic

Authors from the University of Münster

Rohner, Nicolas
Professur für Tierphysiologie (Prof. Rohner)