Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad

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Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad. / De Cahsan, Binia; Kiemel, Katrin; Westbury, Michael V.; Lauritsen, Maike; Autenrieth, Marijke; Gollmann, Günter; Schweiger, Silke; Stenberg, Marika; Nyström, Per; Drews, Hauke; Tiedemann, Ralph.

In: Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 11, No. 14, 2021, p. 9776-9790.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

De Cahsan, B, Kiemel, K, Westbury, MV, Lauritsen, M, Autenrieth, M, Gollmann, G, Schweiger, S, Stenberg, M, Nyström, P, Drews, H & Tiedemann, R 2021, 'Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 11, no. 14, pp. 9776-9790. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7805

APA

De Cahsan, B., Kiemel, K., Westbury, M. V., Lauritsen, M., Autenrieth, M., Gollmann, G., Schweiger, S., Stenberg, M., Nyström, P., Drews, H., & Tiedemann, R. (2021). Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad. Ecology and Evolution, 11(14), 9776-9790. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7805

Vancouver

De Cahsan B, Kiemel K, Westbury MV, Lauritsen M, Autenrieth M, Gollmann G et al. Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad. Ecology and Evolution. 2021;11(14):9776-9790. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7805

Author

De Cahsan, Binia ; Kiemel, Katrin ; Westbury, Michael V. ; Lauritsen, Maike ; Autenrieth, Marijke ; Gollmann, Günter ; Schweiger, Silke ; Stenberg, Marika ; Nyström, Per ; Drews, Hauke ; Tiedemann, Ralph. / Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad. In: Ecology and Evolution. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 14. pp. 9776-9790.

Bibtex

@article{a7b576219e2e4f94b18a65bd390c347e,
title = "Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad",
abstract = "Northern range margin populations of the European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) have rapidly declined during recent decades. Extensive agricultural land use has fragmented the landscape, leading to habitat disruption and loss, as well as eutrophication of ponds. In Northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein) and Southern Sweden (Sk{\aa}ne), this population decline resulted in decreased gene flow from surrounding populations, low genetic diversity, and a putative reduction in adaptive potential, leaving populations vulnerable to future environmental and climatic changes. Previous studies using mitochondrial control region and nuclear transcriptome-wide SNP data detected introgressive hybridization in multiple northern B. bombina populations after unreported release of toads from Austria. Here, we determine the impact of this introgression by comparing the body conditions (proxy for fitness) of introgressed and nonintrogressed populations and the genetic consequences in two candidate genes for putative local adaptation (the MHC II gene as part of the adaptive immune system and the stress response gene HSP70 kDa). We detected regional differences in body condition and observed significantly elevated levels of within individual MHC allele counts in introgressed Swedish populations, associated with a tendency toward higher body weight, relative to regional nonintrogressed populations. These differences were not observed among introgressed and nonintrogressed German populations. Genetic diversity in both MHC and HSP was generally lower in northern than Austrian populations. Our study sheds light on the potential benefits of translocations of more distantly related conspecifics as a means to increase adaptive genetic variability and fitness of genetically depauperate range margin populations without distortion of local adaptation.",
keywords = "Bombina bombina, heat shock protein, introgression, major histocompatibility complex, scaled mass index",
author = "{De Cahsan}, Binia and Katrin Kiemel and Westbury, {Michael V.} and Maike Lauritsen and Marijke Autenrieth and G{\"u}nter Gollmann and Silke Schweiger and Marika Stenberg and Per Nystr{\"o}m and Hauke Drews and Ralph Tiedemann",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1002/ece3.7805",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "9776--9790",
journal = "Ecology and Evolution",
issn = "2045-7758",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Southern introgression increases adaptive immune gene variability in northern range margin populations of Fire-bellied toad

AU - De Cahsan, Binia

AU - Kiemel, Katrin

AU - Westbury, Michael V.

AU - Lauritsen, Maike

AU - Autenrieth, Marijke

AU - Gollmann, Günter

AU - Schweiger, Silke

AU - Stenberg, Marika

AU - Nyström, Per

AU - Drews, Hauke

AU - Tiedemann, Ralph

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Northern range margin populations of the European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) have rapidly declined during recent decades. Extensive agricultural land use has fragmented the landscape, leading to habitat disruption and loss, as well as eutrophication of ponds. In Northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein) and Southern Sweden (Skåne), this population decline resulted in decreased gene flow from surrounding populations, low genetic diversity, and a putative reduction in adaptive potential, leaving populations vulnerable to future environmental and climatic changes. Previous studies using mitochondrial control region and nuclear transcriptome-wide SNP data detected introgressive hybridization in multiple northern B. bombina populations after unreported release of toads from Austria. Here, we determine the impact of this introgression by comparing the body conditions (proxy for fitness) of introgressed and nonintrogressed populations and the genetic consequences in two candidate genes for putative local adaptation (the MHC II gene as part of the adaptive immune system and the stress response gene HSP70 kDa). We detected regional differences in body condition and observed significantly elevated levels of within individual MHC allele counts in introgressed Swedish populations, associated with a tendency toward higher body weight, relative to regional nonintrogressed populations. These differences were not observed among introgressed and nonintrogressed German populations. Genetic diversity in both MHC and HSP was generally lower in northern than Austrian populations. Our study sheds light on the potential benefits of translocations of more distantly related conspecifics as a means to increase adaptive genetic variability and fitness of genetically depauperate range margin populations without distortion of local adaptation.

AB - Northern range margin populations of the European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) have rapidly declined during recent decades. Extensive agricultural land use has fragmented the landscape, leading to habitat disruption and loss, as well as eutrophication of ponds. In Northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein) and Southern Sweden (Skåne), this population decline resulted in decreased gene flow from surrounding populations, low genetic diversity, and a putative reduction in adaptive potential, leaving populations vulnerable to future environmental and climatic changes. Previous studies using mitochondrial control region and nuclear transcriptome-wide SNP data detected introgressive hybridization in multiple northern B. bombina populations after unreported release of toads from Austria. Here, we determine the impact of this introgression by comparing the body conditions (proxy for fitness) of introgressed and nonintrogressed populations and the genetic consequences in two candidate genes for putative local adaptation (the MHC II gene as part of the adaptive immune system and the stress response gene HSP70 kDa). We detected regional differences in body condition and observed significantly elevated levels of within individual MHC allele counts in introgressed Swedish populations, associated with a tendency toward higher body weight, relative to regional nonintrogressed populations. These differences were not observed among introgressed and nonintrogressed German populations. Genetic diversity in both MHC and HSP was generally lower in northern than Austrian populations. Our study sheds light on the potential benefits of translocations of more distantly related conspecifics as a means to increase adaptive genetic variability and fitness of genetically depauperate range margin populations without distortion of local adaptation.

KW - Bombina bombina

KW - heat shock protein

KW - introgression

KW - major histocompatibility complex

KW - scaled mass index

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.7805

DO - 10.1002/ece3.7805

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34306661

AN - SCOPUS:85110922799

VL - 11

SP - 9776

EP - 9790

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 14

ER -

ID: 276270067