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Featured researches published by Rongfeng Cui.


Evolution | 2013

PHYLOGENOMICS REVEALS EXTENSIVE RETICULATE EVOLUTION IN XIPHOPHORUS FISHES

Rongfeng Cui; Molly Schumer; Karla Kruesi; Ronald B. Walter; Peter Andolfatto; Gil G. Rosenthal

Hybridization is increasingly being recognized as a widespread process, even between ecologically and behaviorally divergent animal species. Determining phylogenetic relationships in the presence of hybridization remains a major challenge for evolutionary biologists, but advances in sequencing technology and phylogenetic techniques are beginning to address these challenges. Here we reconstruct evolutionary relationships among swordtails and platyfishes (Xiphophorus: Poeciliidae), a group of species characterized by remarkable morphological diversity and behavioral barriers to interspecific mating. Past attempts to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships within Xiphophorus have produced conflicting results. Because many of the 26 species in the genus are interfertile, these conflicts are likely due to hybridization. Using genomic data, we resolve a high‐confidence species tree of Xiphophorus that accounts for both incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization. Our results allow us to reexamine a long‐standing controversy about the evolution of the sexually selected sword in Xiphophorus, and demonstrate that hybridization has been strikingly widespread in the evolutionary history of this genus.


eLife | 2014

High-resolution mapping reveals hundreds of genetic incompatibilities in hybridizing fish species

Molly Schumer; Rongfeng Cui; Daniel L. Powell; Rebecca Dresner; Gil G. Rosenthal; Peter Andolfatto

Hybridization is increasingly being recognized as a common process in both animal and plant species. Negative epistatic interactions between genes from different parental genomes decrease the fitness of hybrids and can limit gene flow between species. However, little is known about the number and genome-wide distribution of genetic incompatibilities separating species. To detect interacting genes, we perform a high-resolution genome scan for linkage disequilibrium between unlinked genomic regions in naturally occurring hybrid populations of swordtail fish. We estimate that hundreds of pairs of genomic regions contribute to reproductive isolation between these species, despite them being recently diverged. Many of these incompatibilities are likely the result of natural or sexual selection on hybrids, since intrinsic isolation is known to be weak. Patterns of genomic divergence at these regions imply that genetic incompatibilities play a significant role in limiting gene flow even in young species. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02535.001


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Reproductive Isolation of Hybrid Populations Driven by Genetic Incompatibilities

Molly Schumer; Rongfeng Cui; Gil G. Rosenthal; Peter Andolfatto

Despite its role in homogenizing populations, hybridization has also been proposed as a means to generate new species. The conceptual basis for this idea is that hybridization can result in novel phenotypes through recombination between the parental genomes, allowing a hybrid population to occupy ecological niches unavailable to parental species. Here we present an alternative model of the evolution of reproductive isolation in hybrid populations that occurs as a simple consequence of selection against genetic incompatibilities. Unlike previous models of hybrid speciation, our model does not incorporate inbreeding, or assume that hybrids have an ecological or reproductive fitness advantage relative to parental populations. We show that reproductive isolation between hybrids and parental species can evolve frequently and rapidly under this model, even in the presence of substantial ongoing immigration from parental species and strong selection against hybrids. An interesting prediction of our model is that replicate hybrid populations formed from the same pair of parental species can evolve reproductive isolation from each other. This non-adaptive process can therefore generate patterns of species diversity and relatedness that resemble an adaptive radiation. Intriguingly, several known hybrid species exhibit patterns of reproductive isolation consistent with the predictions of our model.


Evolution | 2013

An evaluation of the hybrid speciation hypothesis for Xiphophorus clemenciae based on whole genome sequences.

Molly Schumer; Rongfeng Cui; Bastien Boussau; Ronald B. Walter; Gil G. Rosenthal; Peter Andolfatto

Once thought rare in animal taxa, hybridization has been increasingly recognized as an important and common force in animal evolution. In the past decade, a number of studies have suggested that hybridization has driven speciation in some animal groups. We investigate the signature of hybridization in the genome of a putative hybrid species, Xiphophorus clemenciae, through whole genome sequencing of this species and its hypothesized progenitors. Based on analysis of this data, we find that X. clemenciae is unlikely to have been derived from admixture between its proposed parental species. However, we find significant evidence for recent gene flow between Xiphophorus species. Although we detect genetic exchange in two pairs of species analyzed, the proportion of genomic regions that can be attributed to hybrid origin is small, suggesting that strong behavioral premating isolation prevents frequent hybridization in Xiphophorus. The direction of gene flow between species is potentially consistent with a role for sexual selection in mediating hybridization.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

Automated Interactive Video Playback for Studies of Animal Communication

Trisha Butkowski; Wei Yan; Aaron M. Gray; Rongfeng Cui; Machteld N. Verzijden; Gil G. Rosenthal

Video playback is a widely-used technique for the controlled manipulation and presentation of visual signals in animal communication. In particular, parameter-based computer animation offers the opportunity to independently manipulate any number of behavioral, morphological, or spectral characteristics in the context of realistic, moving images of animals on screen. A major limitation of conventional playback, however, is that the visual stimulus lacks the ability to interact with the live animal. Borrowing from video-game technology, we have created an automated, interactive system for video playback that controls animations in response to real-time signals from a video tracking system. We demonstrated this method by conducting mate-choice trials on female swordtail fish, Xiphophorus birchmanni. Females were given a simultaneous choice between a courting male conspecific and a courting male heterospecific (X. malinche) on opposite sides of an aquarium. The virtual male stimulus was programmed to track the horizontal position of the female, as courting males do in the wild. Mate-choice trials on wild-caught X. birchmanni females were used to validate the prototypes ability to effectively generate a realistic visual stimulus.


Molecular Ecology | 2016

Ancient hybridization and genomic stabilization in a swordtail fish

Molly Schumer; Rongfeng Cui; Daniel L. Powell; Gil G. Rosenthal; Peter Andolfatto

A rapidly increasing body of work is revealing that the genomes of distinct species often exhibit hybrid ancestry, presumably due to postspeciation hybridization between closely related species. Despite the growing number of documented cases, we still know relatively little about how genomes evolve and stabilize following hybridization, and to what extent hybridization is functionally relevant. Here, we examine the case of Xiphophorus nezahualcoyotl, a teleost fish whose genome exhibits significant hybrid ancestry. We show that hybridization was relatively ancient and is unlikely to be ongoing. Strikingly, the genome of X. nezahualcoyotl has largely stabilized following hybridization, distinguishing it from examples such as human–Neanderthal hybridization. Hybridization‐derived regions are remarkably distinct from other regions of the genome, tending to be enriched in genomic regions with reduced constraint. These results suggest that selection has played a role in removing hybrid ancestry from certain functionally important regions. Combined with findings in other systems, our results raise many questions about the process of genomic stabilization and the role of selection in shaping patterns of hybrid ancestry in the genome.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Assortative mating and persistent reproductive isolation in hybrids

Molly Schumer; Daniel L. Powell; Pablo J. Delclos; Mattie K. Squire; Rongfeng Cui; Peter Andolfatto; Gil G. Rosenthal

Significance Understanding the processes that generate or breakdown reproductive isolation between species is essential to understanding evolution. Assortative mating mediates reproductive isolation between species, but its dynamics in natural populations are poorly understood. Here we show that strong assortative mating maintains reproductive isolation in a natural hybrid population following an initial breakdown when the hybrid population formed, and strongly shaped the genetic structure of this population over ∼25 generations. Intriguingly, although in the wild these mate preferences result in nearly 100% of matings occurring between similar genotypes, this barrier breaks down in the laboratory. Our results highlight the importance of assortative mating in shaping hybrid population evolution and imply that short-term breakdown in assortative mating can have long-term evolutionary consequences. The emergence of new species is driven by the establishment of mechanisms that limit gene flow between populations. A major challenge is reconciling the theoretical and empirical importance of assortative mating in speciation with the ease with which it can fail. Swordtail fish have an evolutionary history of hybridization and fragile prezygotic isolating mechanisms. Hybridization between two swordtail species likely arose via pollution-mediated breakdown of assortative mating in the 1990s. Here we track unusual genetic patterns in one hybrid population over the past decade using whole-genome sequencing. Hybrids in this population formed separate genetic clusters by 2003, and maintained near-perfect isolation over 25 generations through strong ancestry-assortative mating. However, we also find that assortative mating was plastic, varying in strength over time and disappearing under manipulated conditions. In addition, a nearby population did not show evidence of assortative mating. Thus, our findings suggest that assortative mating may constitute an intermittent and unpredictable barrier to gene flow, but that variation in its strength can have a major effect on how hybrid populations evolve. Understanding how reproductive isolation varies across populations and through time is critical to understanding speciation and hybridization, as well as their dependence on disturbance.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2017

Early social learning triggers neurogenomic expression changes in a swordtail fish

Rongfeng Cui; Pablo J. Delclos; Molly Schumer; Gil G. Rosenthal

Mate choice can play a pivotal role in the nature and extent of reproductive isolation between species. Mating preferences are often dependent on an individuals social experience with adult phenotypes throughout development. We show that olfactory preference in a swordtail fish (Xiphophorus malinche) is affected by previous experience with adult olfactory signals. We compare transcriptome-wide gene expression levels of pooled sensory and brain tissues between three treatment groups that differ by social experience: females with no adult exposure, females exposed to conspecifics and females exposed to heterospecifics. We identify potential functionally relevant genes and biological pathways differentially expressed not only between control and exposure groups, but also between groups exposed to conspecifics and heterospecifics. Based on our results, we speculate that vomeronasal receptor type 2 paralogs may detect species-specific pheromone components and thus play an important role in reproductive isolation between species.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2016

simMSG: an experimental design tool for high-throughput genotyping of hybrids.

Molly Schumer; Rongfeng Cui; Gil G. Rosenthal; Peter Andolfatto

Hybridization between closely related species, whether naturally occurring or laboratory generated, is a useful tool for mapping the genetic basis of the phenotypic traits that distinguish species. The development of next‐generation sequencing techniques has greatly improved our ability to assign ancestry to hybrid genomes. One such next‐generation sequencing technique, multiplexed shotgun genotyping (or MSG), can be a powerful tool for genotyping hybrids. However, it is difficult a priori to predict the accuracy of MSG in natural hybrids because accuracy depends on ancestry tract length and number of ancestry informative markers. Here, we present a simulator, ‘simMSG’, that will allow researchers to design MSG experiments and show that in many cases MSG can accurately assign ancestry to hundreds of thousands of sites in the genomes of natural hybrids. The simMSG tool can be used to design experiments for diverse applications including QTL mapping, genotyping introgressed lines or admixture mapping.


Evolutionary Ecology Research | 2013

anyFish: an open-source software to generate animated fish models for behavioural studies

Thor Veen; Spencer J. Ingley; Rongfeng Cui; Jon Simpson; Mohammad Rahmani Asl; Ji Zhang; Trisha Butkowski; Wen Li; Chelsea Hash; Jerald B. Johnson; Wei Yan; Gil G. Rosenthal

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