| Literature DB >> 19689812 |
Ruth B Phillips1, Kimberly A Keatley, Matthew R Morasch, Abigail B Ventura, Krzysztof P Lubieniecki, Ben F Koop, Roy G Danzmann, William S Davidson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most teleost species, especially freshwater groups such as the Esocidae which are the closest relatives of salmonids, have a karyotype comprising 25 pairs of acrocentric chromosomes and 48-52 chromosome arms. After the common ancestor of salmonids underwent a whole genome duplication, its karyotype would have 100 chromosome arms, and this is reflected in the modal range of 96-104 seen in extant salmonids (e.g., rainbow trout). The Atlantic salmon is an exception among the salmonids as it has 72-74 chromosome arms and its karyotype includes 12 pairs of large acrocentric chromosomes, which appear to be the result of tandem fusions. The purpose of this study was to integrate the Atlantic salmon's linkage map and karyotype and to compare the chromosome map with that of rainbow trout.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19689812 PMCID: PMC2734554 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-10-46
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Figure 1Atlantic salmon chromosomes showing a dual hybridization with a BAC clone (S0004J13 labeled in red) containing myostatin-1 and Ssa0283BSFU (mapped to LG 20), which hybridizes to Ssa25, and a second BAC clone (S0046P15 labeled in green) containing myostatin-2 and Ssa0402BSFU (mapped to LG 14), which hybridizes to Ssa21.
Figure 2Composite of 29 partial Atlantic salmon karyotypes showing results of hybridization with BAC clones containing markers mapped to each linkage group. In each case, the sex chromosome pair from the same metaphase cell is shown below the chromosome pair containing the probe signal to indicate relative size, except for the sex chromosome pair itself, which is the second largest metacentric chromosome. Probes shown are named according to the marker that the BAC contains-followed by the BAC clone: Ssa1: BHMS281-S0198E23, Ssa2 (sex chromosome): Oneu18ASC-S0119E21, Ssa3: Ssa86-S0034P12, Ssa4: Ssa0133BSFU-S0426K01, Ssa5: BHMS206-S0026A22, Ssa6: Ssa0043BSFU-S0322O19, Ssa7: Ssa0037BSFU-S0121A15, Ssa8: Ssa0007BSFU-S0214J02, Ssa9: SSOSL85-S0040B06, Ssa10: Ssa0020BSFU-S0439A22, Ssa11: Ssa0982BSFU-S0056B24, Ssa12: BHMS146-S0195D10, Ssa13: Ssa0008BSFU-S0229A14, Ssa14: Ssa1027BSFU-S0008I14, Ssa15: Ssa197DU-S0121A09, Ssa16: OMM1013-S0097E23, Ssa17: BHMS304-S0031H11, Ssa18: Ssa0125BSFU-S0036I05, Ssa19: BHMS289-S0006P09, Ssa20: Ssa0730BSFU-S0067N15, Ssa21: Ssa0402BSFU-S0259B12, Ssa22: Ssa65-S0018L24, Ssa23: BHMS377-S0102N22, Ssa24: Ssa0006BSFU-S0191E15, Ssa25: BHMS241-S0014L21, Ssa26: Ssa0800BSFU-S0059P02, Ssa27: BHMS127-S0166I14, Ssa28: Ssa224-S0021G10, Ssa29: Ssa0084BSFU-S0016D16.
Figure 3Ideogram of the European Atlantic salmon karyotype showing the location of the BAC probes mapped by FISH. Information concerning these BACs and their corresponding genetic markers is given in Additional File 1.
Atlantic salmon chromosomes and linkage group rankings according to size.
| 1 M* | 17 | 174.2 | 1 |
| 2 M | 1 (sex) | 110.7 | 5 |
| 3 M | 11 | 104.2 | 8 |
| 4 M | 28 | 91.1 | 9 |
| 5 M | 12 | 104.3 | 10 |
| 6 M | 4 | 100.9 | 14 |
| 7 M | 24 | 104.2 | 18 |
| 8 M | 19 | 78.1 | 21 |
| 9 A | 10 | 105.3 | 2 |
| 10 A | 2 | 95.5 | 3 |
| 11 A | 9 | 86.9 | 4 |
| 12 A | 6 | 77.1 | 6 |
| 13 A | 5 | 90.1 | 7 |
| 14 A | 3 | 53.1 | 29 |
| 15 A | 8 | 65.1 | 11 |
| 16 A | 23 | 97.7 | 12 |
| 17 A | 22 | 92.5 | 13 |
| 18 A | 16 | 95.5 | 15 |
| 19 A | 13 | 72.7 | 16 |
| 20 A | 25 | 77.0 | 17 |
| 21 A | 14 | 60.8 | 19 |
| 22 A | 32 | 70.5 | 20 |
| 23 A | 18 | 55.3 | 22 |
| 24 A | 7 | 56.5 | 23 |
| 25 A | 20 | 71.6 | 24 |
| 26 A | 21 | 35.8 | 25 |
| 27 A | 15 | 37.9 | 26 |
| 28 A | 33 | 50.0 | 27 |
| 29 A | 31 | 57.5 | 28 |
*M indicates a metacentric chromosome and A indicates an acroentric chromosome.
Homologous chromosome arms of Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout**.
| 1p | 17 | 19q | 14q | 13qa | 5 | 16q | 22q |
| 1qa | " | 23 | 30 | 13qb | " | 12p | 9p |
| 1qb | " | 5p | 8p | 14qa | 3 | 8q | 23q |
| 2p | 1 (sex) | 3p | 31p | 14qb | " | 14p | 3p |
| 2q | " | 17p | 29p | 15qa | 8 | 8p | 23p |
| 3p | 11 | 28 | 13 | 15qb | " | 9q | 21q |
| 3q | " | 12q | 9q | 16qa | 23 | 1p | 6p |
| 4p | 28 | 19p | 14p | 16qb | " | 18p | 16p |
| 4q | " | 10p | 20p | 17qa | 22 | 15q | 7q |
| 5p | 12 | 14q | 3q | 17qb | " | 7p | 12p |
| 5q | " | 2p | 27p | 18qa | 16 | 1q | 6q |
| 6p | 4 | 4q | 24q | 18qb | " | 9p | 21p |
| 6q | " | 13q | 2q | 19qa | 13 | 11p | 19p |
| 7p | 24 | 21p | 15p | 19qb | " | 16p | 22p |
| 7q | " | 21q | 15q | 20qa | 25 | 11q | 19q |
| 8p* | rDNA | 20p* | rDNA | 20qb | " | 27 | 11 |
| 8q | 19 | 10q | 20q | 21 | 14 | 22p, q | 5 |
| 9qa | 10 | 25 | 4 | 22 | 32 | 7q | 12q |
| 9qb | " | 29 | 25 | 23 | 18 | 4p | 24p |
| 9qc | " | 24 | 26 | 24 | 7 | 6p | 10p |
| 10qa | 2 | 5q | 8q | 25 | 20 | 3q | 31q |
| 10qb | " | 2q | 27q | 26 | 21 | 6q | 10q |
| 11qa | 9 | sex | 1 | 27 | 15 | 18q | 16q |
| 11qb | " | 26 | 18 | 28 | 33 | 20q | 17q |
| 12qa | 6 | 13p/17p | 2p/29p | 29 | 31 | 15p | 7p |
| 12qb | " | 17q | 29q | ||||
*Note: The short arm of chromosome 8 (LG 19p) in Atlantic salmon and chromosome 20 (LG 17p) in rainbow trout are composed entirely of ribosomal DNA, and so are not counted as one of the 50 haploid chromosome arms. Table 2 is an updated version of part of Table 1 [11] with a couple of corrections. In that table, the homologies between rainbow trout 7p and 7q were assigned an inverted orientation. As shown here, rainbow trout LG 7p corresponds to Atlantic salmon LG 31 whereas rainbow trout LG 7q corresponds to Atlantic salmon LG 22qa. In addition, Atlantic salmon LG 1q corresponds to rainbow trout LG 29p (i.e., RT-29 arms were previously reported in an inverted orientation).
** It should be noted that there are only 29 linkage groups in the Atlantic salmon genetic map. The nomenclature for the linkage groups is historical, and linkage groups 26, 27, 29 and 30 no longer exist. Similarly, there are only 30 linkage groups in rainbow trout as linkage group 28 no longer exists.
Highly supported homeologous chromosome arms in Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout
| 1q/6q | 2q/12qb | 2p/29p | 13p/17p | 5 | 13 |
| 1p/12q | 2p/5q | 31p/27p | 3p/2p | 9 | 16 |
| 4p/11p | 6p/3q | 9q/2q | 12q/13q | 9 | 20 |
| 22q/24q | 17qa/7q | 7q/15q | 15q/21q | 5 | 9 |
| 22q/23 | 17qb/16qa | 12p/16p | 7p/18p | 5 | 15 |
| 19q/28p | 8q/4p | 20q/14p | 10q/19p | 4 | 10 |
| 21/9q* | 26/11qb | 10q/18 | 6q/26 | 0 | 10 |
Note: All pairs with duplicated markers in rainbow trout except the last pair involve two metacentric chromosomes. *This last pair does not contain duplicated markers in Atlantic salmon and involves a small acrocentric and large acrocentric in that species. Although LG 18 is an acrocentric chromosome in rainbow trout, it is part of a metacentric in coho and chinook salmon, suggesting that this may be the ancestral configuration for the genus Oncorhynchus.