Rethinking Eco-evo Studies of Gene Expression for Non-model Organisms in
the Genomic Era
Abstract
Recent advances in genomic technology, including the rapid development
of long-read sequencing technology and single-cell RNA-sequencing
methods, are poised to significantly expand the kinds of studies that
are feasible in ecological genomics. In this perspective, we review
these new technologies and discuss their potential impact on gene
expression studies in non-model organisms. Although traditional
RNA-sequencing methods have been an extraordinarily powerful tool to
apply functional genomics in an ecological context, bulk RNA-seq
approaches often rely on de novo transcriptome assembly, and cannot
capture expression changes in rare cell populations or distinguish
shifts in cell type abundance. Advancements in genome assembly
technology, particularly long-read sequencing, and improvements in the
scalability of single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), offer
unprecedented resolution in understanding cellular heterogeneity and
gene regulation. We discuss the potential of these technologies enable
disentangling differential gene regulation from cell type composition
differences and uncovering subtle expression patterns masked by bulk
RNA-seq. The integration of these approaches provides a more nuanced
understanding of the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of gene
expression, paving the way for refined models and deeper insights into
the generation of biodiversity.