Authors
Claudius F Kratochwil, Yipeng Liang, Jan Gerwin, Joost M Woltering, Sabine Urban, Frederico Henning, Gonzalo Machado-Schiaffino, C Darrin Hulsey, Axel Meyer
Publication date
2018/10/26
Journal
Science
Volume
362
Issue
6413
Pages
457-460
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
The color patterns of African cichlid fishes provide notable examples of phenotypic convergence. Across the more than 1200 East African rift lake species, melanic horizontal stripes have evolved numerous times. We discovered that regulatory changes of the gene agouti-related peptide 2 (agrp2) act as molecular switches controlling this evolutionarily labile phenotype. Reduced agrp2 expression is convergently associated with the presence of stripe patterns across species flocks. However, cis-regulatory mutations are not predictive of stripes across radiations, suggesting independent regulatory mechanisms. Genetic mapping confirms the link between the agrp2 locus and stripe patterns. The crucial role of agrp2 is further supported by a CRISPR-Cas9 knockout that reconstitutes stripes in a nonstriped cichlid. Thus, we unveil how a single gene affects the convergent evolution of a complex color pattern.
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