Abstract

SummaryAtlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) is among the most iconic and economically important fish species and was the first member of Salmonidae to have a high‐quality reference genome assembly published. Advances in genomics have become increasingly central to the genetic improvement of farmed Atlantic salmon as well as conservation of wild salmon stocks. The salmon genome has also been pivotal in shaping our understanding of the evolutionary and functional consequences arising from an ancestral whole‐genome duplication event characterising all Salmonidae members. Here, we provide a review of the current status of Atlantic salmon genetics and genomics, focussed on progress made from genome‐wide research aimed at improving aquaculture production and enhancing understanding of salmonid ecology, physiology and evolution. We present our views on the future direction of salmon genomics, including the role of emerging technologies (e.g. genome editing) in elucidating genetic features that underpin functional variation in traits of commercial and evolutionary importance.

Highlights

  • Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) is among the most famous and economically important fish species globally

  • The goal of this article is to provide an overview of Atlantic salmon and its key genetic features before reviewing the current and future research landscape in genetics and genomics

  • Autotetraploidization leads to four chromosome sets that initially pair randomly during meiosis after whole-genome duplication (WGD); preferential bivalent pairing must be reestablished before duplicated genes created by WGD can diverge beyond an allelic state (Martin & Holland 2014; Lien et al 2016; Robertson et al 2017)

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Summary

Edinburgh Research Explorer

Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) genetics in the 21st century: taking leaps forward in aquaculture and biological understanding. Citation for published version: Houston, R & Macqueen, D 2018, 'Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) genetics in the 21st century: taking leaps forward in aquaculture and biological understanding', Animal Genetics.

Summary
Introduction
Address for correspondence
Phylogeny and macroevolution
Domestication and selective breeding
Mapping QTL and genomic selection
Improvements in genome assemblies
Improved annotation and understanding of genome function and regulation
Moving towards WGS for population analysis
Genome editing for understanding and improving traits
Regulatory and public perception landscape
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