PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - D. J. Parker AU - R. A. W. Wiberg AU - U. Trivedi AU - V. I. Tyukmaeva AU - K. Gharbi AU - R. K. Butlin AU - A. Hoikkala AU - M. Kankare AU - M. G. Ritchie TI - Inter- and intra-specific genomic divergence in <em>Drosophila montana</em> shows evidence for cold adaptation AID - 10.1101/282582 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 282582 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/03/14/282582.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/03/14/282582.full AB - The genomes of species that are ecological specialists will likely contain signatures of genomic adaptation to their niche. However, distinguishing genes related to their ecological specialism from other sources of selection and more random changes is a challenge. Here we describe the genome of Drosophila montana, the most extremely cold-adapted Drosophila species. We describe the genome, which is similar in size and gene content to most Drosophila species. We look for evidence of accelerated divergence from a previously sequenced relative, and do not find strong evidence for divergent selection on coding sequence variation. We use branch tests to identify genes showing accelerated divergence in contrasts between cold- and warm adapted species and identify about 250 genes that show differences, possibly driven by a lower synonymous substitution rate in cold-adapted species. Divergent genes are involved in a variety of functions, including cuticular and olfactory processes. We also re-sequenced three populations of D. montana representing its ecological and geographic range. Outlier loci were more likely to be found on the X chromosome and there was a greater than expected overlap between population outliers and those genes implicated in cold adaptation between Drosophila species, implying some continuity of selective process at these different evolutionary scales.