| Literature DB >> 32497342 |
Hugo Cayuela1, Quentin Rougemont1, Martin Laporte1, Claire Mérot1, Eric Normandeau1, Yann Dorant1, Ole K Tørresen2, Siv Nam Khang Hoff2, Sissel Jentoft2, Pascal Sirois3, Martin Castonguay4, Teunis Jansen5,6, Kim Praebel7, Marie Clément8,9, Louis Bernatchez1.
Abstract
Gene flow has tremendous importance for local adaptation, by influencing the fate of de novo mutations, maintaining standing genetic variation and driving adaptive introgression. Furthermore, structural variation as chromosomal rearrangements may facilitate adaptation despite high gene flow. However, our understanding of the evolutionary mechanisms impending or favouring local adaptation in the presence of gene flow is still limited to a restricted number of study systems. In this study, we examined how demographic history, shared ancestral polymorphism, and gene flow among glacial lineages contribute to local adaptation to sea conditions in a marine fish, the capelin (Mallotus villosus). We first assembled a 490-Mbp draft genome of M. villosus to map our RAD sequence reads. Then, we used a large data set of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (25,904 filtered SNPs) genotyped in 1,310 individuals collected from 31 spawning sites in the northwest Atlantic. We reconstructed the history of divergence among three glacial lineages and showed that they probably diverged from 3.8 to 1.8 million years ago and experienced secondary contacts. Within each lineage, our analyses provided evidence for large Ne and high gene flow among spawning sites. Within the Northwest Atlantic lineage, we detected a polymorphic chromosomal rearrangement leading to the occurrence of three haplogroups. Genotype-environment associations revealed molecular signatures of local adaptation to environmental conditions prevailing at spawning sites. Our study also suggests that both shared polymorphisms among lineages, resulting from standing genetic variation or introgression, and chromosomal rearrangements may contribute to local adaptation in the presence of high gene flow.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Mallotus villosuszzm321990; RAD; fish; inversion; joint Site Frequency Spectrum; population genomics; speciation; δaδi
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32497342 DOI: 10.1111/mec.15499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185