Independent evolution toward larger body size in the distinctive Faroe Island mice.

Published
February 10, 2021
Journal
G3 (Bethesda, Md.)
PICOID
10538b87
DOI
Citations
0
Keywords
QTL, evolution, genetic mapping, island mice, mouse
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Genetics Society of America.
Patients/Population/Participants

Faroe Islands mice, laboratory mouse strain SM/J, F2 intercross of 841 animals

Intervention

genetic cross, artificial selection

Comparison

comparing against other studies, joint meta-analysis

Outcome

identified 111 loci controlling various aspects of body size, weight and growth hormone levels, evolution of large size in the Faroese mice was largely independent from those of a different island population or other laboratory strains

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Most phenotypic traits in nature involve the collective action of many genes. Traits that evolve repeatedly are particularly useful for understanding how selection may act on changing trait values. In mice, large body size has evolved repeatedly on islands and under artificial selection in the laboratory. Identifying the loci and genes involved in this process may shed light on the evolution of complex, polygenic traits. Here, we have mapped the genetic basis of body size variation by making a genetic cross between mice from the Faroe Islands, which are among the largest and most distinctive natural populations of mice in the world, and a laboratory mouse strain selected for small body size, SM/J. Using this F2 intercross of 841 animals, we have identified 111 loci controlling various aspects of body size, weight and growth hormone levels. By comparing against other studies, including the use of a joint meta-analysis, we found that the loci involved in the evolution of large size in the Faroese mice were largely independent from those of a different island population or other laboratory strains. We hypothesize that colonization bottleneck, historical hybridization, or the redundancy between multiple loci have resulted in the Faroese mice achieving an outwardly similar phenotype through a distinct evolutionary path.

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