Abstract

BackgroundRainbow trout is an economically important fish and a suitable experimental organism in many fields of biology including genome evolution, owing to the occurrence of a salmonid specific whole-genome duplication (4th WGD). Rainbow trout is among some of the most studied teleosts and has benefited from substantial efforts to develop genomic resources (e.g., linkage maps. Here, we first generated a synthetic map by merging segregation data files derived from three independent linkage maps. Then, we used it to evaluate genome conservation between rainbow trout and three teleost models, medaka, stickleback and zebrafish and to further investigate the extent of the 4th WGD in trout genome.ResultsThe INRA linkage map was updated by adding 211 new markers. After standardization of marker names, consistency of marker assignment to linkage groups and marker orders was checked across the three different data sets and only loci showing consistent location over all or almost all of the data sets were kept. This resulted in a synthetic map consisting of 2226 markers and 29 linkage groups spanning over 3600 cM. Blastn searches against medaka, stickleback, and zebrafish genomic databases resulted in 778, 824 and 730 significant hits respectively while blastx searches yielded 505, 513 and 510 significant hits. Homology search results revealed that, for most rainbow trout chromosomes, large syntenic regions encompassing nearly whole chromosome arms have been conserved between rainbow trout and its closest models, medaka and stickleback. Large conserved syntenies were also found between the genomes of rainbow trout and the reconstructed teleost ancestor. These syntenies consolidated the known homeologous affinities between rainbow trout chromosomes due to the 4th WGD and suggested new ones.ConclusionsThe synthetic map constructed herein further highlights the stability of the teleost genome over long evolutionary time scales. This map can be easily extended by incorporating new data sets and should help future rainbow trout whole genome sequence assembly. Finally, the persistence of large conserved syntenies across teleosts should facilitate the identification of candidate genes through comparative mapping, even if the occurrence of intra-chromosomal micro-rearrangement may hinder the accurate prediction their genomic location.

Highlights

  • Rainbow trout is an economically important fish and a suitable experimental organism in many fields of biology including genome evolution, owing to the occurrence of a salmonid specific whole-genome duplication (4th WGD)

  • Linkage group assignments or positions in the linkage group have been corrected for a number of markers after comparison with other published maps

  • This approach is iterative and the present synthetic map could be incorporated to any new data set following the same method

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Summary

Introduction

Rainbow trout is an economically important fish and a suitable experimental organism in many fields of biology including genome evolution, owing to the occurrence of a salmonid specific whole-genome duplication (4th WGD). Whole genome sequences and dense type II marker linkage maps are available in a fast-growing number of organisms They have been extensively compared to trace the evolution of genomes in the major vertebrate phyla across large time-scales and to recover the events chrondrichthyes-osteichthyes split) and a third one specific to the actinopterygians [6,7,8]. A second important outcome has been the reconstitution of the ancestral vertebrate proto-chromosomes and their fate along the different vertebrate lineages, based on the distribution of conserved syntenic blocks among vertebrates This has facilitated tracing the origins of the proto-vertebrate karyotype back to 10 ancestral chromosomes prior to their radiation in the chordates [10,11,12]. Such reconstitutions have led to the conclusion that chromosomes have been reshaped through inversions within chromosomes rather than translocations in teleosts while inter-chromosomal rearrangements have been very frequent in the tetrapod lineage [11,12]

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