Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States; Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States
Tyler Powell
Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States; Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States
HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology, Huntsville, United States
John K McKay
Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States; Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, United States
Interdisciplinary syntheses are needed to scale up discovery of the environmental drivers and molecular basis of adaptation in nature. Here we integrated novel approaches using whole genome sequences, satellite remote sensing, and transgenic experiments to study natural loss-of-function alleles associated with drought histories in wild Arabidopsis thaliana. The genes we identified exhibit population genetic signatures of parallel molecular evolution, selection for loss-of-function, and shared associations with flowering time phenotypes in directions consistent with longstanding adaptive hypotheses seven times more often than expected by chance. We then confirmed predicted phenotypes experimentally in transgenic knockout lines. These findings reveal the importance of drought timing to explain the evolution of alternative drought tolerance strategies and further challenge popular assumptions about the adaptive value of genetic loss-of-function in nature. These results also motivate improved species-wide sequencing efforts to better identify loss-of-function variants and inspire new opportunities for engineering climate resilience in crops.