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Featured researches published by John T. Lovell.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Genetic mapping of adaptation reveals fitness tradeoffs in Arabidopsis thaliana

Jon Ågren; Christopher G. Oakley; John K. McKay; John T. Lovell; Douglas W. Schemske

Significance Adaptation to local environmental conditions is common, but the genetic mechanisms of adaptation are poorly known. We produced recombinant inbred lines (RILs) of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana by crossing populations that inhabit drastically different climates in Sweden and Italy, grew the RILs at the parental sites for 3 y, and genetically mapped quantitative trait loci (QTL) for fitness. The results demonstrate that surprisingly few QTL explain much of the adaptive divergence between the two plant populations. Moreover, we find strong evidence for tradeoffs (i.e., adaptation to one environment reduces performance elsewhere). The results shed light on processes governing the evolution of biological diversity and the potential for adaptive evolution in response to environmental change. Organisms inhabiting different environments are often locally adapted, and yet despite a considerable body of theory, the genetic basis of local adaptation is poorly understood. Unanswered questions include the number and effect sizes of adaptive loci, whether locally favored loci reduce fitness elsewhere (i.e., fitness tradeoffs), and whether a lack of genetic variation limits adaptation. To address these questions, we mapped quantitative trait loci (QTL) for total fitness in 398 recombinant inbred lines derived from a cross between locally adapted populations of the highly selfing plant Arabidopsis thaliana from Sweden and Italy and grown for 3 consecutive years at the parental sites (>40,000 plants monitored). We show that local adaptation is controlled by relatively few genomic regions of small to modest effect. A third of the 15 fitness QTL we detected showed evidence of tradeoffs, which contrasts with the minimal evidence for fitness tradeoffs found in previous studies. This difference may reflect the power of our multiyear study to distinguish conditionally neutral QTL from those that reflect fitness tradeoffs. In Sweden, but not in Italy, the local genotype underlying fitness QTL was often maladaptive, suggesting that adaptation there is constrained by a lack of adaptive genetic variation, attributable perhaps to genetic bottlenecks during postglacial colonization of Scandinavia or to recent changes in selection regime caused by climate change. Our results suggest that adaptation to markedly different environments can be achieved through changes in relatively few genomic regions, that fitness tradeoffs are common, and that lack of genetic variation can limit adaptation.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2013

Pleiotropy of FRIGIDA enhances the potential for multivariate adaptation.

John T. Lovell; Thomas E. Juenger; Scott D. Michaels; Jesse R. Lasky; Alexander Platt; James H. Richards; Xuhong Yu; Hsien Ming Easlon; Saunak Sen; John K. McKay

An evolutionary response to selection requires genetic variation; however, even if it exists, then the genetic details of the variation can constrain adaptation. In the simplest case, unlinked loci and uncorrelated phenotypes respond directly to multivariate selection and permit unrestricted paths to adaptive peaks. By contrast, ‘antagonistic’ pleiotropic loci may constrain adaptation by affecting variation of many traits and limiting the direction of trait correlations to vectors that are not favoured by selection. However, certain pleiotropic configurations may improve the conditions for adaptive evolution. Here, we present evidence that the Arabidopsis thaliana gene FRI (FRIGIDA) exhibits ‘adaptive’ pleiotropy, producing trait correlations along an axis that results in two adaptive strategies. Derived, low expression FRI alleles confer a ‘drought escape’ strategy owing to fast growth, low water use efficiency and early flowering. By contrast, a dehydration avoidance strategy is conferred by the ancestral phenotype of late flowering, slow growth and efficient water use during photosynthesis. The dehydration avoidant phenotype was recovered when genotypes with null FRI alleles were transformed with functional alleles. Our findings indicate that the well-documented effects of FRI on phenology result from differences in physiology, not only a simple developmental switch.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2013

On the origin and evolution of apomixis in Boechera

John T. Lovell; Olawale M. Aliyu; Martin Mau; M. E. Schranz; Marcus A. Koch; Christiane Kiefer; Bao-Hua Song; Thomas Mitchell-Olds; Timothy Francis Sharbel

The genetic mechanisms causing seed development by gametophytic apomixis in plants are predominantly unknown. As apomixis is consistently associated with hybridity and polyploidy, these confounding factors may either (a) be the underlying mechanism for the expression of apomixis, or (b) obscure the genetic factors which cause apomixis. To distinguish between these hypotheses, we analyzed the population genetic patterns of diploid and triploid apomictic lineages and their sexual progenitors in the genus Boechera (Brassicaceae). We find that while triploid apomixis is associated with hybridization, the majority of diploid apomictic lineages are likely the product of intra-specific crosses. We then show that these diploid apomicts are more likely to sire triploid apomictic lineages than conspecific sexuals. Combined with flow cytometric seed screen phenotyping for male and female components of apomixis, our analyses demonstrate that hybridization is an indirect correlate of apomixis in Boechera.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Hybrid apomicts trapped in the ecological niches of their sexual ancestors

Martin Mau; John T. Lovell; José M. Corral; Christiane Kiefer; Marcus A. Koch; Olawale M. Aliyu; Timothy F. Sharbel

Significance Ecological-niche differentiation in diploid sexual–polyploid asexual complexes has been observed within and among many taxa, yet the relative contributions of reproductive system and ploidy are not fully understood. Here, we assess niche characteristics of sexual diploid, apomictic (asexual) diploid, and triploid Boechera (Brassicaceae) lineages. We find strong evidence for widespread hybridization and, to a lesser degree, ploidy variation as factors that together overcome the adaptive disadvantages of apomictic (i.e., asexual) reproduction. When controlling for ploidy, we find only modest evidence for putatively asexually driven ecological-niche divergence among reproductive systems, a finding that contradicts the well-supported patterns of geographic parthenogenesis. Asexual reproduction is expected to reduce the adaptive potential to novel or changing environmental conditions, restricting or altering the ecological niche of asexual lineages. Asexual lineages of plants and animals are typically polyploid, an attribute that may influence their genetic variation, plasticity, adaptive potential, and niche breadth. The genus Boechera (Brassicaceae) represents an ideal model to test the relative ecological and biogeographic impacts of reproductive mode and ploidy because it is composed of diploid sexual and both diploid and polyploid asexual (i.e., apomictic) lineages. Here, we demonstrate a strong association between a transcriptionally conserved allele and apomictic seed formation. We then use this allele as a proxy apomixis marker in 1,649 accessions to demonstrate that apomixis is likely to be a common feature across the Boechera phylogeny. Phylogeographic analyses of these data demonstrate (i) species-specific niche differentiation in sexuals, (ii) extensive niche conservation between differing reproductive modes of the same species, (iii) ploidy-specific niche differentiation within and among species, and (iv) occasional niche drift between apomicts and their sexual ancestors. We conclude that ploidy is a substantially stronger and more common driver of niche divergence within and across Boechera species although variation in both traits may not necessarily lead to niche evolution on the species scale.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Field-based high throughput phenotyping rapidly identifies genomic regions controlling yield components in rice

Paul Tanger; Stephen Klassen; Julius P. Mojica; John T. Lovell; Brook T. Moyers; Marietta Baraoidan; Maria Elizabeth B. Naredo; Kenneth L. McNally; Jesse Poland; Daniel R. Bush; Hei Leung; Jan E. Leach; John K. McKay

To ensure food security in the face of population growth, decreasing water and land for agriculture, and increasing climate variability, crop yields must increase faster than the current rates. Increased yields will require implementing novel approaches in genetic discovery and breeding. Here we demonstrate the potential of field-based high throughput phenotyping (HTP) on a large recombinant population of rice to identify genetic variation underlying important traits. We find that detecting quantitative trait loci (QTL) with HTP phenotyping is as accurate and effective as traditional labor-intensive measures of flowering time, height, biomass, grain yield, and harvest index. Genetic mapping in this population, derived from a cross of an modern cultivar (IR64) with a landrace (Aswina), identified four alleles with negative effect on grain yield that are fixed in IR64, demonstrating the potential for HTP of large populations as a strategy for the second green revolution.


The Plant Cell | 2015

Exploiting Differential Gene Expression and Epistasis to Discover Candidate Genes for Drought-Associated QTLs in Arabidopsis thaliana

John T. Lovell; Jack L. Mullen; David B. Lowry; Kedija Awole; James H. Richards; Saunak Sen; Paul E. Verslues; Thomas E. Juenger; John K. McKay

Analysis of the causal connections between environmental variation and the genotype-phenotype map revealed candidate genes for constitutive and plastic responses to soil moisture reduction in the context of QTL mapping. Soil water availability represents one of the most important selective agents for plants in nature and the single greatest abiotic determinant of agricultural productivity, yet the genetic bases of drought acclimation responses remain poorly understood. Here, we developed a systems-genetic approach to characterize quantitative trait loci (QTLs), physiological traits and genes that affect responses to soil moisture deficit in the TSUxKAS mapping population of Arabidopsis thaliana. To determine the effects of candidate genes underlying QTLs, we analyzed gene expression as a covariate within the QTL model in an effort to mechanistically link markers, RNA expression, and the phenotype. This strategy produced ranked lists of candidate genes for several drought-associated traits, including water use efficiency, growth, abscisic acid concentration (ABA), and proline concentration. As a proof of concept, we recovered known causal loci for several QTLs. For other traits, including ABA, we identified novel loci not previously associated with drought. Furthermore, we documented natural variation at two key steps in proline metabolism and demonstrated that the mitochondrial genome differentially affects genomic QTLs to influence proline accumulation. These findings demonstrate that linking genome, transcriptome, and phenotype data holds great promise to extend the utility of genetic mapping, even when QTL effects are modest or complex.


Plant Physiology | 2016

Promises and challenges of eco-physiological genomics in the field : tests of drought responses in switchgrass

John T. Lovell; Eugene V. Shakirov; Scott Schwartz; David B. Lowry; Michael J. Aspinwall; Samuel H. Taylor; Jason Bonnette; Juan Diego Palacio-Mejía; Christine V. Hawkes; Philip A. Fay; Thomas E. Juenger

Physiological and gene expression analyses across field and greenhouse experiments highlight diverse gene expression patterns that produce physiologically similar responses to soil water deficits. Identifying the physiological and genetic basis of stress tolerance in plants has proven to be critical to understanding adaptation in both agricultural and natural systems. However, many discoveries were initially made in the controlled conditions of greenhouses or laboratories, not in the field. To test the comparability of drought responses across field and greenhouse environments, we undertook three independent experiments using the switchgrass reference genotype Alamo AP13. We analyzed physiological and gene expression variation across four locations, two sampling times, and three years. Relatively similar physiological responses and expression coefficients of variation across experiments masked highly dissimilar gene expression responses to drought. Critically, a drought experiment utilizing small pots in the greenhouse elicited nearly identical physiological changes as an experiment conducted in the field, but an order of magnitude more differentially expressed genes. However, we were able to define a suite of several hundred genes that were differentially expressed across all experiments. This list was strongly enriched in photosynthesis, water status, and reactive oxygen species responsive genes. The strong across-experiment correlations between physiological plasticity—but not differential gene expression—highlight the complex and diverse genetic mechanisms that can produce phenotypically similar responses to various soil water deficits.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

Mutation Accumulation in an Asexual Relative of Arabidopsis

John T. Lovell; Robert J. Williamson; Stephen I. Wright; John K. McKay; Timothy F. Sharbel

Asexual populations experience weaker responses to natural selection, which causes deleterious mutations to accumulate over time. Additionally, stochastic loss of individuals free of deleterious mutations can lead to an irreversible increase in mutational load in asexuals (the “click” in Muller’s Ratchet). Here we report on the genomic divergence and distribution of mutations across eight sympatric pairs of sexual and apomictic (asexual) Boechera (Brassicaceae) genotypes. We show that apomicts harbor a greater number of derived mutations than sympatric sexual genotypes. Furthermore, in phylogenetically constrained sites that are subject to contemporary purifying selection, the ancestral, conserved allele is more likely to be retained in sexuals than apomicts. These results indicate that apomictic lineages accumulate mutations at otherwise conserved sites more often than sexuals, and support the conclusion that deleterious mutation accumulation can be a powerful force in the evolution of asexual higher plants.


Genome Research | 2016

Drought responsive gene expression regulatory divergence between upland and lowland ecotypes of a perennial C4 grass

John T. Lovell; Scott Schwartz; David B. Lowry; Eugene V. Shakirov; Jason Bonnette; Xiaoyu Weng; Mei Wang; Jenifer Johnson; Avinash Sreedasyam; Christopher Plott; Jerry Jenkins; Jeremy Schmutz; Thomas E. Juenger

Climatic adaptation is an example of a genotype-by-environment interaction (G×E) of fitness. Selection upon gene expression regulatory variation can contribute to adaptive phenotypic diversity; however, surprisingly few studies have examined how genome-wide patterns of gene expression G×E are manifested in response to environmental stress and other selective agents that cause climatic adaptation. Here, we characterize drought-responsive expression divergence between upland (drought-adapted) and lowland (mesic) ecotypes of the perennial C4 grass,Panicum hallii, in natural field conditions. Overall, we find that cis-regulatory elements contributed to gene expression divergence across 47% of genes, 7.2% of which exhibit drought-responsive G×E. While less well-represented, we observe 1294 genes (7.8%) with transeffects.Trans-by-environment interactions are weaker and much less common than cis G×E, occurring in only 0.7% oft rans-regulated genes. Finally, gene expression heterosis is highly enriched in expression phenotypes with significant G×E. As such, modes of inheritance that drive heterosis, such as dominance or overdominance, may be common among G×E genes. Interestingly, motifs specific to drought-responsive transcription factors are highly enriched in the promoters of genes exhibiting G×E and transregulation, indicating that expression G×E and heterosis may result from the evolution of transcription factors or their binding sites.P. hallii serves as the genomic model for its close relative and emerging biofuel crop, switchgrass (Panicum virgatum). Accordingly, the results here not only aid in the discovery of the genetic mechanisms that underlie local adaptation but also provide a foundation to improve switchgrass yield under water-limited conditions.


Molecular Ecology | 2014

Mating system and environmental variation drive patterns of adaptation in Boechera spatifolia (Brassicaceae)

John T. Lovell; Kelsi Grogan; Timothy F. Sharbel; John K. McKay

Determining the relative contribution of population genetic processes to the distribution of natural variation is a major goal of evolutionary biology. Here, we take advantage of variation in mating system to test the hypothesis that local adaptation is constrained by asexual reproduction. We explored patterns of variation in ecological traits and genome‐wide molecular markers in Boechera spatifolia (Brassicaceae), a species that contains both apomictic (asexual) and sexual individuals. Using a combination of quantitative genetics, neutral genetic (SSR) and genome‐wide single nucleotide polymorphism, we assessed the hypothesis that asexual lineages should have reduced signatures of adaptation relative to sexual conspecifics. All three measures (traits, SSRs, SNPs) demonstrated that apomicts are genetically distinct from sexuals, regardless of population location. Additionally, phylogenetic clustering revealed that the apomictic group shared a single common ancestor. Across the landscape, sexual genome‐wide SNP variation was strongly associated with latitude (r2 > 0.9), indicating that sexual populations have differentiated across an environmental gradient. Furthermore, flowering time and growth rate, as assessed in a common garden, strongly covary with the elevation and latitude of the source population. Despite a wide geographic distribution that largely overlaps with sexual populations, there was little evidence for differentiation in molecular markers or quantitative characters among apomictic populations. Combined, these data indicated that, in contrast to asexual populations, sexual populations show evidence of local adaptation.

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John K. McKay

Colorado State University

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Thomas E. Juenger

University of Texas at Austin

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Jack L. Mullen

Colorado State University

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David B. Lowry

Michigan State University

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Jason Bonnette

University of Texas at Austin

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Brook T. Moyers

Colorado State University

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