The role of genomic signatures of directional selection and demographic history in the population structure of a marine teleost with high gene flow

被引:2
|
作者
Weist, Peggy [1 ,5 ]
Jentoft, Sissel [2 ]
Torresen, Ole K. K. [2 ]
Schade, Franziska M. M. [3 ]
Pampoulie, Christophe [4 ]
Krumme, Uwe [3 ]
Hanel, Reinhold [1 ]
机构
[1] Thunen Inst Balt Sea Fisheries, Rostock, Germany
[2] Univ Oslo, Ctr Ecol & Evolutionary Synth, Dept Biosci, Oslo, Norway
[3] Thunen Inst Fisheries Ecol, Bremerhaven, Germany
[4] Marine & Freshwater Res Inst, Hafnafjordur, Iceland
[5] Thunen Inst Fisheries Ecol, Herwigstr 31, D-27572 Bremerhaven, Germany
来源
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION | 2022年 / 12卷 / 12期
关键词
adaptive variation; candidate gene; divergence hitchhiking; genome assembly; ice ages; single nucleotide polymorphism; PLAICE PLEURONECTES-PLATESSA; NORTH-SEA; ATLANTIC COD; BALTIC SEA; R PACKAGE; POSITIVE SELECTION; LOCAL ADAPTATION; DIVERGENCE; DIFFERENTIATION; CONNECTIVITY;
D O I
10.1002/ece3.9602
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Recent studies have uncovered patterns of genomic divergence in marine teleosts where panmixia due to high gene flow has been the general paradigm. These signatures of divergent selection are often impacted by structural variants, acting as "supergenes" facilitating local adaptation. The highly dispersing European plaice (Pleuronectes platessa)-in which putative structural variants (i.e., inversions) have been identified-has successfully colonized the brackish water ecosystem of the Baltic Sea. Thus, the species represents an ideal opportunity to investigate how the interplay of gene flow, structural variants, natural selection, past demographic history, and gene flow impacts on population (sub)structuring in marine systems. Here, we report on the generation of an annotated draft plaice genome assembly in combination with population sequencing data-following the salinity gradient from the Baltic Sea into the North Sea together with samples from Icelandic waters-to illuminate genome-wide patterns of divergence. Neutral markers pointed at large-scale panmixia across the European continental shelf associated with high gene flow and a common postglacial colonization history of shelf populations. However, based on genome-wide outlier loci, we uncovered signatures of population substructuring among the European continental shelf populations, i.e., suggesting signs of ongoing selection. Genome-wide selection analyses (xp-EHH) and the identification of genes within genomic regions of recent selective sweeps-overlapping with the outlier loci-suggest that these represent the signs of divergent selection. Our findings provide support for genomic divergence driven by local adaptation in the face of high gene flow and elucidate the relative importance of demographic history versus adaptive divergence in shaping the contemporary population genetic structure of a marine teleost. The role of the putative inversion(s) in the substructuring-and potentially ongoing adaptation-was seemingly not substantial.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Population structure and local selection yield high genomic variation in Mimulus guttatus
    Puzey, Joshua R.
    Willis, John H.
    Kelly, John K.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2017, 26 (02) : 519 - 535
  • [22] Demographic history, genetic structure and gene flow in a steppe-associated raptor species
    Garcia, Jesus T.
    Alda, Fernando
    Terraube, Julien
    Mougeot, Francois
    Sternalski, Audrey
    Bretagnolle, Vincent
    Arroyo, Beatriz
    BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2011, 11
  • [23] Demographic history, genetic structure and gene flow in a steppe-associated raptor species
    Jesus T Garcia
    Fernando Alda
    Julien Terraube
    François Mougeot
    Audrey Sternalski
    Vincent Bretagnolle
    Beatriz Arroyo
    BMC Evolutionary Biology, 11
  • [24] Evidence for spatial structure and directional gene flow in a population of an aquatic plant, Potamogeton coloratus
    Gornall, RJ
    Hollingsworth, PM
    Preston, CD
    HEREDITY, 1998, 80 (4) : 414 - 421
  • [25] Evidence for spatial structure and directional gene flow in a population of an aquatic plant, Potamogeton coloratus
    Richard J Gornall
    Peter M Hollingsworth
    Christopher D Preston
    Heredity, 1998, 80 : 414 - 421
  • [26] Population Structure and Adaptive Divergence in a High Gene Flow Marine Fish: The Small Yellow Croaker (Larimichthys polyactis)
    Liu, Bing-Jian
    Zhang, Bai-Dong
    Xue, Dong-Xiu
    Gao, Tian-Xiang
    Liu, Jin-Xian
    PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (04):
  • [27] Population genomics of a forest fungus reveals high gene flow and climate adaptation signatures
    Sonstebo, Jorn Henrik
    Trucchi, Emiliano
    Norden, Jenni
    Skrede, Inger
    Miettinen, Otto
    Haridas, Sajeet
    Pangilinan, Jasmyn
    Grigoriev, Igor, V
    Martin, Francis
    Kauserud, Havard
    Maurice, Sundy
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2022, 31 (07) : 1963 - 1979
  • [28] Genomics reveal population structure, evolutionary history, and signatures of selection in the northern bottlenose whale, Hyperoodon ampullatus
    de Greef, Evelien
    Einfeldt, Anthony L.
    Miller, Patrick J. O.
    Ferguson, Steven H.
    Garroway, Colin J.
    Lefort, Kyle J.
    Paterson, Ian G.
    Bentzen, Paul
    Feyrer, Laura J.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2022, 31 (19) : 4919 - 4931
  • [29] Population structure, genomic diversity and demographic history of Komodo dragons inferred from whole-genome sequencing
    Iannucci, Alessio
    Benazzo, Andrea
    Natali, Chiara
    Arida, Evy Ayu
    Zein, Moch Samsul Arifin
    Jessop, Tim S.
    Bertorelle, Giorgio
    Ciofi, Claudio
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2021, 30 (23) : 6309 - 6324
  • [30] LANDSCAPE GENOMICS OF POPULUS TRICHOCARPA: THE ROLE OF HYBRIDIZATION, LIMITED GENE FLOW, AND NATURAL SELECTION IN SHAPING PATTERNS OF POPULATION STRUCTURE
    Geraldes, Armando
    Farzaneh, Nima
    Grassa, Christopher J.
    McKown, Athena D.
    Guy, Robert D.
    Mansfield, Shawn D.
    Douglas, Carl J.
    Cronk, Quentin C. B.
    EVOLUTION, 2014, 68 (11) : 3260 - 3280