Landscape genomics of an obligate mutualism: Concordant and discordant population structures between the leafcutter ant Atta texana and its two main fungal symbiont types
Date
2019
Authors
Smith, Chad C.
Weber, Jesse N.
Mikheyev, Alexander
Roces, Flavio
Bollazzi, Martin
Kellner, Katrin
Seal, Jon N.
Mueller, Ulrich G.
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
To explore landscape genomics at the range limit of an obligate mutualism, we use
genotyping‐by‐sequencing (ddRADseq) to quantify population structure and the
effect of host–symbiont interactions between the northernmost fungus‐farming
leafcutter ant Atta texana and its two main types of cultivated fungus. Genome‐
wide differentiation between ants associated with either of the two fungal types
is of the same order of magnitude as differentiation associated with temperature
and precipitation across the ant's entire range, suggesting that specific ant–fungus
genome–genome combinations may have been favoured by selection. For the ant
hosts, we found a broad cline of genetic structure across the range, and a reduction of genetic diversity along the axis of range expansion towards the range margin. This population‐genetic structure was concordant between the ants and one
cultivar type (M‐fungi, concordant clines) but discordant for the other cultivar type
(T‐fungi). Discordance in population‐genetic structures between ant hosts and a fungal symbiont is surprising because the ant farmers codisperse with their vertically
transmitted fungal symbionts. Discordance implies that (a) the fungi disperse also
through between‐nest horizontal transfer or other unknown mechanisms, and (b) genetic drift and gene flow can differ in magnitude between each partner and between
different ant–fungus combinations. Together, these findings imply that variation in
the strength of drift and gene flow experienced by each mutualistic partner affects
adaptation to environmental stress at the range margin, and genome–genome interactions between host and symbiont influence adaptive genetic differentiation of the
host during range evolution in this obligate mutualism.
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Keywords
Atta texana, bedassle, environmental cline, intergenomic epistasis, mutualism, population structure
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Source
Molecular Ecology
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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