Adaptive phenotypes are shaped by a combination of genetic and
environmental forces, and while the literature is rich with studies
focusing on either genetics or environment contributions, those that
consider both are rare. Here we utilize the cichlid oral jaw apparatus
to fill this knowledge-gap. 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. 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
reared in the pelagic versus benthic environment. Further, these 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 in either the pelagic (n=15) or
the benthic environment (n=11), as well as loci where differences were
robust to foraging environment (n=13). All in all, these data provide
novel insights into the epigenetic, genetic, and cellular bases of
species- and environment-specific bone shapes, as well as the evolution
of phenotypic plasticity in this iconic model system.
A major ongoing challenge in biological research is to understand the origin and maintenance of biodiversity, with broad implications in conservation, ecology and evolutionary biology. Traditionally, these endeavours have involved characterizing the forces and mechanisms operating above the organismal level (e.g. selection, environmental
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