Regulatory divergence may underlie ecological adaptation of
chronobiological functions between speciated desert tortoises
Abstract
Many cellular processes and organismal behaviors are time-dependent, and
asynchrony of these phenomena can facilitate speciation through
prezygotic and postzygotic reinforcement mechanisms. The Mojave and
Sonoran desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii and G. morafkai,
respectively) reside in adjoining deserts with distinct seasonal
rainfall patterns and they exhibit asynchronous winter brumation and
reproductive behaviors. We used whole genome sequencing of 21
individuals from the two tortoise species and an outgroup to understand
genes potentially underlying these characteristics. Eighty percent
(80%) of the mutations in the most diverged 1% of the genome (FST ≥
0.63) mapped to putatively non-functional flanking regions. Diverged
genes with putatively functional variation showed extensive mutations in
regulatory elements, particularly in predicted promoter regions.
Clusters of genes relating to UV nucleotide excision repair,
mitonuclear, and homeostasis functions had mutations in these diverged
regions. Genes mediating chronobiological (cell cycle, circadian, and
circannual) processes were also among the most highly diverged regions
(e.g., XPA and ZFHX3). Promoter mutations had significant enrichment of
genes related to regulatory machinery (ARC-Mediator complex, HDACs)
suggest transcriptional cascades driven by regulatory divergence may
underlie the behavioral differences between these species, leading to
asynchrony-based prezygotic isolation. Further investigation revealed
extensive expansion of respiratory and intestinal mucins (MUC5B, MUC5AC)
within Gopherus, particularly G. morafkai. This expansion could
contribute to differential Mycoplasma agassizii infection rates between
the two species, as mucins help clear bacterial infections. Overall,
results highlight that evolution of transcription regulation, apart from
protein changes, might play an important role in the divergence and
reinforcement during speciation.