| Literature DB >> 26373374 |
Jun Hong Xia1,2, Zhiyi Bai3, Zining Meng2, Yong Zhang2, Le Wang1, Feng Liu1, Wu Jing4, Zi Yi Wan1, Jiale Li3, Haoran Lin2, Gen Hua Yue1,5,6.
Abstract
Natural selection and selective breeding for genetic improvement have left detectable signatures within the genome of a species. Identification of selection signatures is important in evolutionary biology and for detecting genes that facilitate to accelerate genetic improvement. However, selection signatures, including artificial selection and natural selection, have only been identified at the whole genome level in several genetically improved fish species. Tilapia is one of the most important genetically improved fish species in the world. Using next-generation sequencing, we sequenced the genomes of 47 tilapia individuals. We identified a total of 1.43 million high-quality SNPs and found that the LD block sizes ranged from 10-100 kb in tilapia. We detected over a hundred putative selective sweep regions in each line of tilapia. Most selection signatures were located in non-coding regions of the tilapia genome. The Wnt signaling, gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor and integrin signaling pathways were under positive selection in all improved tilapia lines. Our study provides a genome-wide map of genetic variation and selection footprints in tilapia, which could be important for genetic studies and accelerating genetic improvement of tilapia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26373374 PMCID: PMC4570987 DOI: 10.1038/srep14168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The length of each chromosome, number of SNPs and bp/SNP in each chromosome in the tilapia genome.
| Chromosome | Length (bp) | No. of SNPs | bp/SNP |
|---|---|---|---|
| LG1 | 31,194,787 | 66,667 | 467 |
| LG2 | 25,048,291 | 54,674 | 458 |
| LG3 | 19,325,363 | 45,994 | 420 |
| LG4 | 28,679,955 | 62,090 | 461 |
| LG5 | 37,389,089 | 76,982 | 485 |
| LG6 | 36,725,243 | 78,467 | 468 |
| LG7 | 51,042,256 | 105,510 | 483 |
| LG8_24 | 29,447,820 | 63,620 | 462 |
| LG9 | 20,956,653 | 51,939 | 403 |
| LG10 | 17,092,887 | 37,405 | 456 |
| LG11 | 33,447,472 | 65,518 | 510 |
| LG12 | 34,679,706 | 75,111 | 461 |
| LG13 | 32,787,261 | 70,323 | 466 |
| LG14 | 34,191,023 | 72,524 | 471 |
| LG15 | 26,684,556 | 64,112 | 416 |
| LG16_21 | 34,890,008 | 75,132 | 464 |
| LG17 | 31,749,960 | 67,295 | 471 |
| LG18 | 26,198,306 | 54,807 | 478 |
| LG19 | 27,159,252 | 62,063 | 437 |
| LG20 | 31,470,686 | 65,221 | 482 |
| LG22 | 26,410,405 | 59,341 | 445 |
| LG23 | 20,779,993 | 44,394 | 468 |
| UNK1 | 7,888,616 | 16,904 | 466 |
Figure 1Percentage of SNPs in different locations in the tilapia genome and number of SNPs in each category of mutations in exons.
(A) Percentage of SNPs in different locations in the tilapia genome; (B) Number of SNPs in each category of mutations in exons.
Figure 2Number and heterozygosities of SNPs identified in five populations of tilapia.
(A) Number of SNPs identified in five populations of tilapia; (B) Heterozygosities of SNPs in five populations of tilapia.
Figure 3Population substructure in tilapia revealed by principal component analysis and phylogenetic tree analysis.
(A) Principal component analysis. The five populations are shown in different colors and symbols; (B) Phylogenetic tree analysis. The five populations and clades are shown in different colors. The population ID and sample ID are presented.
Figure 4Number of different size LD blocks (A) and LD decay detected in the five populations of tilapia (B).
Figure 5The genome-wide sweep analysis based on iHS statistics for the GIFT tilapia population.
The iHS value at a locus on each chromosome are shown in the figure. Some genes with significant SNPs when using an iHS threshold of ±2 are shown. The LG8_24, LG16_21 and Unk1 scaffold are shown as Chromosome 8, 16 and 21 for clarity.
Figure 6Number of genes in different ontology categories (A) and number of overlapping pathways containing genes under selection among four genetically improved tilapia populations (B).