Pooja Singh

Pooja Singh
Universität Bern | UniBe · Institute of Ecology and Evolution

Dr. rer. nat.
Researcher @ the Uni of Bern and EAWAG

About

53
Publications
13,012
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Introduction
I am an evolutionary and computational geneticist from Botswana. I completed in BSc and MSc in South Africa and my PhD in Austria. My first postdoc was in Canada and I am now a senior postdoc/lecturer in Switzerland. Currently, my interests span various aspects of adaptive evolution and speciation, and the underlying genetic mechanisms, particularly at short timescales. I have worked on plant and animals systems. Check out my website for more details: https://poojasinghevogen.weebly.com

Publications

Publications (53)
Article
Full-text available
Although alternative splicing is a ubiquitous gene regulatory mechanism in plants, animals and fungi, its contribution to evolutionary transitions is understudied. Alternative splicing enables different mRNA isoforms to be generated from the same gene, expanding transcriptomic and thus proteomic diversity. While the role of gene expression variatio...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the genetic basis of how plants defend against pathogens is important to monitor and maintain resilient tree populations. Swiss needle cast (SNC) and Rhabdocline needle cast (RNC) epidemics are responsible for major damage of forest ecosystems in North America. Here we investigate the genetic architecture of tolerance and resistance t...
Article
Understanding the processes that drive phenotypic diversification and underpin speciation is key to elucidating how biodiversity has evolved. Although these processes have been studied across a wide array of clades, adaptive radiations (ARs), which are systems with multiple closely related species and broad phenotypic diversity, have been particula...
Preprint
Full-text available
In recent decades, Dothistroma needle blight (DNB), a pine tree disease caused by the fungal pathogen Dothistroma septosporum, has severely damaged lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud. var. latifolia) in British Columbia, Canada. The pathogen has already shown signs of host shift eastward to lodgepole × jack hybrid pine populations, and p...
Article
Full-text available
Methods using genomic information to forecast potential population maladaptation to climate change or new environments are becoming increasingly common, yet the lack of model validation poses serious hurdles toward their incorporation into management and policy. Here, we compare the validation of maladaptation estimates derived from two methods—Gra...
Preprint
Full-text available
Emerging evidence suggests a link between adiposity and early maturation, potentially impacting hormonal signaling pathways governing puberty timing. Fish models have proven invaluable in studying these processes, given their genetic and physiological similarities to humans. In Atlantic salmon, in addition to being linked with environmental shifts...
Article
Full-text available
Hybridization, or interbreeding between different taxa, was traditionally considered to be rare and to have a largely detrimental impact on biodiversity, sometimes leading to the breakdown of reproductive isolation and even to the reversal of speciation. However, modern genomic and analytical methods have shown that hybridization is common in some...
Article
Sexual maturation in many fishes requires a major physiological change that involves a rapid transition between energy storage and usage. In Atlantic salmon, this transition for the initiation of maturation is tightly controlled by seasonality and requires a high-energy status. Lipid metabolism is at the heart of this transition since lipids are th...
Preprint
Full-text available
Developmental shifts in gene regulation underlying key innovations remain largely uncharacterised at short evolutionary timescales. Here we investigate the gene expression and alternative splicing landscape of trophic innovations in the fastest vertebrate adaptive radiation: cichlid fishes from Lake Victoria. Using whole-transcriptomes of the oral...
Preprint
Full-text available
Closely-related species often use the same genes to adapt to similar environments 1,2 . However, we know little about why such genes possess increased adaptive potential, and whether this is conserved across deeper evolutionary time. Classic theory suggests a “cost of complexity”: adaptation should occur via genes affecting fewer traits to reduce d...
Preprint
Full-text available
Sexual maturation in many fishes requires a major physiological change that involves a rapid transition between energy storage and usage. In Atlantic salmon, this transition for the initiation of maturation is tightly controlled by seasonality and requires a high-energy status . Lipid metabolism is at the heart of this transition since lipids are t...
Article
Full-text available
Instances of repeated evolution of novel phenotypes can shed light on the conserved molecular mechanisms underlying morphological diversity. A rare example of an exaggerated soft tissue phenotype is the formation of a snout flap in fishes. This tissue flap develops from the upper lip and has evolved in one cichlid genus from Lake Malawi and one gen...
Preprint
Full-text available
Methods using genomic information to forecast population maladaptation to climate change are becoming increasingly common, yet the lack of model validation poses serious hurdles toward their incorporation into management and policy. Here, we compare the validation of two methods - Gradient Forests (GF) and the Risk Of Non-Adaptedness - using exome...
Article
Full-text available
Sexually antagonistic selection, which favours different optimums in males and females, is predicted to play an important role in the evolution of sex chromosomes. Body size is a sexually antagonistic trait in the shell-brooding cichlid fish Lamprologous callipterus as ‘bourgeois’ males must be large enough to carry empty snail shells to build nest...
Preprint
Full-text available
Understanding the genetic architecture of tolerance and resistance to pathogens is important to monitor and maintain resilient tree populations. Here we investigate the genetic basis of tolerance and resistance and to needle cast disease in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) caused by two fungal pathogens: Swiss needle cast (SNC) caused by Nothoph...
Article
Full-text available
Cichlid fishes of the tribe Tropheini are a striking case of adaptive radiation, exemplifying multiple trophic transitions between herbivory and carnivory occurring in sympatry with other established cichlid lineages. Tropheini evolved highly specialized eco-morphologies to exploit similar trophic niches in different ways repeatedly and rapidly. To...
Article
Full-text available
The use of next‐generation sequencing (NGS) datasets has increased dramatically over the last decade, but there have been few systematic analyses quantifying the accuracy of the commonly used variant caller programs. Here we used a familial design consisting of diploid tissue from a single lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) parent and the maternally d...
Preprint
Full-text available
Studying instances of convergent evolution of novel phenotypes can shed light on the evolutionary constraints that shape morphological diversity. Cichlid fishes from the East African Great Lakes are a prime model to investigate convergent adaptations. However, most studies on cichlid craniofacial morphologies have primarily considered bony structur...
Preprint
The use of NGS datasets has increased dramatically over the last decade, however, there have been few systematic analyses quantifying the accuracy of the commonly used variant caller programs. Here we used a familial design consisting of diploid tissue from a single Pinus contorta parent and the maternally derived haploid tissue from 106 full-sibli...
Preprint
Full-text available
The use of NGS datasets has increased dramatically over the last decade, however, there have been few systematic analyses quantifying the accuracy of the commonly used variant caller programs. Here we used a familial design consisting of diploid tissue from a single Pinus contorta parent and the maternally derived haploid tissue from 106 full-sibli...
Preprint
Full-text available
Although alternative splicing is a ubiquitous gene regulatory mechanism in plants and animals, its contribution to evolutionary transitions is understudied. Splicing enables different mRNA isoforms to be generated from the same gene, expanding transcriptomic and proteomic diversity. While the role of gene expression in adaptive evolution is widely...
Article
Full-text available
Despite their suitability for studying evolution, many conifer species have large and repetitive giga-genomes (16-31Gbp) that create hurdles to producing high coverage SNP datasets that capture diversity from across the entirety of the genome. Due in part to multiple ancient whole genome duplication events, gene family expansion and subsequent evol...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Teleosts display a spectacular diversity of craniofacial adaptations that often mediates ecological specializations. A considerable amount of research has revealed molecular players underlying skeletal craniofacial morphologies, but less is known about soft craniofacial phenotypes. Here we focus on an example of lip hypertrophy in the b...
Article
Full-text available
Background The oral and pharyngeal jaw of cichlid fishes are a classic example of evolutionary modularity as their functional decoupling boosted trophic diversification and contributed to the success of cichlid adaptive radiations. Most studies until now have focused on the functional, morphological, or genetic aspects of cichlid jaw modularity. He...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background:Teleosts display a spectacular diversity of craniofacial adaptations that often mediate ecological specializations. A considerable amount of research has revealed molecular players underlying skeletal craniofacial morphologies, but less is known about soft craniofacial phenotypes. Here we focus on a bizarre example of lip hypertrophy in...
Preprint
Full-text available
Despite their suitability for studying evolution, many conifer species have large and repetitive giga-genomes (16-31Gbp) that create hurdles to producing high coverage SNP datasets that captures diversity from across the entirety of the genome. Due in part to multiple ancient whole genome duplication events, gene family expansion and subsequent evo...
Article
Full-text available
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
Article
Full-text available
Genes in plant secondary metabolic pathways enable biosynthesis of a range of medically and industrially important compounds, and are often clustered on chromosomes. Here, we study genomic clustering in the benzylisoquinoline alkaloid (BIA) pathway in opium poppy (Papaver somniferum), exploring relationships between gene expression, copy number var...
Article
Full-text available
Feeding is a complex behaviour comprised of satiety control, foraging, ingestion and subsequent digestion. Cichlids from the East African Great Lakes are renowned for their diverse trophic specializations, largely predicated on highly variable jaw morphologies. Thus, most research has focused on dissecting the genetic, morphological and regulatory...
Article
Full-text available
East African cichlid fishes represent a model to tackle adaptive changes and their connection to rapid speciation and ecological distinction. In comparison to bony craniofacial tissues, adaptive morphogenesis of soft tissues has been rarely addressed, particularly at the molecular level. The nuchal hump in cichlids fishes is one such soft-tissue an...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Understanding how variation in gene expression contributes to morphological diversity is a major goal in evolutionary biology. Cichlid fishes from the East African Great lakes exhibit striking diversity in trophic adaptations predicated on the functional modularity of their two sets of jaws (oral and pharyngeal). However, the transcrip...
Preprint
Full-text available
Feeding is a complex behaviour comprised of satiety control, foraging, ingestion and subsequent digestion. Cichlids from the East African Great Lakes are renowned for their diverse trophic specializations, largely predicated on highly variable jaw morphologies. Thus, most research has focused on dissecting the genetic, morphological and regulatory...
Preprint
Feeding is a complex behaviour comprised of satiety control, foraging, ingestion and subsequent digestion. Cichlids from the East African Great Lakes are renowned for their diverse trophic specializations, largely predicated on highly variable jaw morphologies. Thus, most research has focused on dissecting the genetic, morphological and regulatory...
Article
Full-text available
Background Egg size represents an important form of maternal effect determined by a complex interplay of long-term adaptation and short-term plasticity balancing egg size with brood size. Haplochromine cichlids are maternal mouthbrooders showing differential parental investment in different species, manifested in great variation in egg size, brood...
Article
Full-text available
Lake Tanganyika is the oldest and phenotypically most diverse of the three East African cichlid fish adaptive radiations. It is also the cradle for the younger parallel haplochromine cichlid radiations in Lakes Malawi and Victoria. Despite its evolutionary significance, the relationships among the main Lake Tanganyika lineages remained unresolved,...
Article
Full-text available
Species diverge eco-morphologically through the continuous action of natural selection on functionally important structures, producing alternative adaptive morphologies. In cichlid fishes, the oral and pharyngeal jaws are such key structures. Adaptive variation in jaw morphology contributes to trophic specialisation, which is hypothesised to fuel t...
Presentation
Full-text available
Unnoticed by the public, initiatives for oil exploration are advanced in Africa’s largest freshwater reservoirs, including Lakes Tanganyika, Malawi and lately Albert, threatening their ecosystems and biota. It is imperative that environmental impact assessments are conducted by independent organizations to ensure that decisions on this matter are b...
Article
Full-text available
As the world’s demands for hydrocarbons increase, remote areas previously made inaccessible by technological limitations are now being prospected for oil and gas deposits. Virtually unnoticed by the public, such activities are ongoing in the East African Great Lakes region, threatening these ecosystems famed for their hyper-diverse biota, includin...
Article
Full-text available
Eucalypts are the world’s most widely planted hardwood trees. Their outstanding diversity, adaptability and growth have made them a global renewable resource of fibre and energy. We sequenced and assembled >94% of the 640-megabase genome of Eucalyptus grandis. Of 36,376 predicted protein-coding genes, 34% occur in tandem duplications, the largest p...
Conference Paper
The study of transcription factor and modified histone targets in non-model woody species is challenged by a lack of high-throughput platforms. Chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled to next-generation DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) allows for genome-wide mapping of in vivo protein-DNA interactions, but its application in non-model species and new tissue...
Conference Paper
In addition to transcriptome-wide analysis of gene expression, next-generation RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) allows analysis of transcript encoded protein sequence variation underlying quantitative traits in plants. High impact amino acid polymorphisms predicted to cause loss of function (LoF) of protein-coding genes may contribute to the evolution of p...

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