Abstract

BackgroundAdaptive genomics may help predicting how a species will respond to future environmental changes. Genomic signatures of local adaptation in marine organisms are often driven by environmental selective agents impacting the physiology of organisms. With one of the highest salinity level, the Mediterranean Sea provides an excellent model to investigate adaptive genomic divergence underlying salinity adaptation. In the present study, we combined six genome scan methods to detect potential genomic signal of selection in the striped red mullet (Mullus surmuletus) populations distributed across a wide salinity gradient. We then blasted these outlier sequences on published fish genomic resources in order to identify relevant potential candidate genes for salinity adaptation in this species.ResultsAltogether, the six genome scan methods found 173 outliers out of 1153 SNPs. Using a blast approach, we discovered four candidate SNPs belonging to three genes potentially implicated in adaptation of M. surmuletus to salinity. The allele frequency at one of these SNPs significantly increases with salinity independently from the effect of longitude. The gene associated to this SNP, SOCS2, encodes for an inhibitor of cytokine and has previously been shown to be expressed under osmotic pressure in other marine organisms. Additionally, our results showed that genome scan methods not correcting for spatial structure can still be an efficient strategy to detect potential footprints of selection, when the spatial and environmental variation are confounded, and then, correcting for spatial structure in a second step represents a conservative method.ConclusionThe present outcomes bring evidences of potential genomic footprint of selection, which suggest an adaptive response of M. surmuletus to salinity conditions in the Mediterranean Sea. Additional genomic data such as sequencing of a full-genome and transcriptome analyses of gene expression would provide new insights regarding the possibility that some striped red mullet populations are locally adapted to their saline environment.

Highlights

  • Adaptive genomics may help predicting how a species will respond to future environmental changes

  • Recent work on European bass [14], Atlantic cod [18] and three-spine stickleback [19, 20] have already reported a suite of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within or closely located to genes involved in osmoregulation, altogether leading to a wide list of targeted salinity and osmoregulation genes known for teleost fishes

  • Considering that salinity and temperature are correlated in the Mediterranean Sea, we assumed that the candidate SNPs we identified could be associated with variations in temperature

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Summary

Introduction

Adaptive genomics may help predicting how a species will respond to future environmental changes. Adaptive genomics aims to understand the molecular basis of local adaptation in species experiencing a wide range of environmental gradients This emerging research field may help predicting how a species will respond to future environmental changes [1] as well as delineating sustainable management units [2,3,4]. This important area of research has taken advantage of the arrival of generation sequencing (NGS) with reduced sequencing costs, allowing thousands of markers, both potentially neutral and adaptive, to be sequenced in hundreds of individuals [5]. Recent work on European bass [14], Atlantic cod [18] and three-spine stickleback [19, 20] have already reported a suite of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within or closely located to genes involved in osmoregulation, altogether leading to a wide list of targeted salinity and osmoregulation genes known for teleost fishes (reviewed in Dennenmoser et al [17])

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