Abstract

Comparisons between the genomes of salmon species reveal that they underwent extensive chromosomal rearrangements following whole genome duplication that occurred in their lineage 58−63 million years ago. Extant salmonids are diploid, but occasional pairing between homeologous chromosomes exists in males. The consequences of re-diploidization can be characterized by mapping the position of duplicated loci in such species. Linkage maps are also a valuable tool for genome-wide applications such as genome-wide association studies, quantitative trait loci mapping or genome scans. Here, we investigated chromosomal evolution in Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) after genome duplication by mapping 7146 restriction-site associated DNA loci in gynogenetic haploid, gynogenetic diploid, and diploid crosses. In the process, we developed a reference database of restriction-site associated DNA loci for Chinook salmon comprising 48528 non-duplicated loci and 6409 known duplicated loci, which will facilitate locus identification and data sharing. We created a very dense linkage map anchored to all 34 chromosomes for the species, and all arms were identified through centromere mapping. The map positions of 799 duplicated loci revealed that homeologous pairs have diverged at different rates following whole genome duplication, and that degree of differentiation along arms was variable. Many of the homeologous pairs with high numbers of duplicated markers appear conserved with other salmon species, suggesting that retention of conserved homeologous pairing in some arms preceded species divergence. As chromosome arms are highly conserved across species, the major resources developed for Chinook salmon in this study are also relevant for other related species.

Highlights

  • Comparisons between the genomes of salmon species reveal that they underwent extensive chromosomal rearrangements following whole genome duplication that occurred in their lineage 58263 million years ago

  • A recent linkage map based on single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) showed that duplicated loci were not randomly distributed among all chromosomes within Atlantic salmon (Lien et al 2011), suggesting that diploidization rates have not been uniform among homeologous pairs

  • The aim of this study was to characterize the evolution of Chinook salmon chromosomes relative to that of other salmonids following a whole duplication event in a common ancestor

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Summary

Introduction

Comparisons between the genomes of salmon species reveal that they underwent extensive chromosomal rearrangements following whole genome duplication that occurred in their lineage 58263 million years ago. The map positions of 799 duplicated loci revealed that homeologous pairs have diverged at different rates following whole genome duplication, and that degree of differentiation along arms was variable. A recent linkage map based on single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) showed that duplicated loci were not randomly distributed among all chromosomes within Atlantic salmon (Lien et al 2011), suggesting that diploidization rates have not been uniform among homeologous pairs. The distribution of duplicated loci along each homeologous chromosome pair has yet to be described Such information in another salmon species will reveal the rates of divergence along the chromosome, and a comparative analysis will identify whether chromosomal divergence is conserved across species descended from the WGD event

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