Abstract

BackgroundSalmonids are regarded as 4R derivative species, having experienced 4 whole genome duplication events in their ancestry. Many duplicated chromosome regions still share extensive homology with one another which is maintained primarily through male-based homeologous chromosome pairings during meiosis. The formation of quadrivalents during meiosis leads to pseudolinkage. This phenomenon is more prevalent within 5 of the 12 ancestral teleost linkage groups in salmonids.ResultsWe constructed a genetic linkage map for brook charr and used this in combination with the genetic map from Arctic charr, to make comparisons with the genetic map of rainbow trout. Although not all chromosome arms are currently mapped, some homologous chromosome rearrangements were evident between Arctic charr and brook charr. Notably, 10 chromosome arms in brook charr representing 5 metacentric chromosomes in Arctic charr have undergone rearrangements. Three metacentrics have one arm translocated and fused with another chromosome arm in brook charr to a make a new metacentrics while two metacentrics are represented by 4 acrocentric pairs in brook charr. In two cases (i.e., BC-4 and BC-16), an apparent polymorphism was observed with the identification of both a putative metacentric structure (similar to metacentric AC-4 = BC-4 and a joining of acrocentric AC-16 + one arm of AC-28 = BC-16), as well as two separate acrocentric linkage groups evident in the mapping parents. Forty-six of the expected 50 karyotypic arms could be inter-generically assigned. SEX in brook charr (BC-4) was localized to the same homologous linkage group region as in Arctic charr (AC-4). The homeologous affinities detected in the two charr species facilitated the identification of 20 (expected number = 25) shared syntenic regions with rainbow trout, although it is likely that some of these regions were partial or overlapping arm regions.ConclusionsInter-generic comparisons among 2 species of charr (genus Salvelinus) and a trout (genus Oncorhynchus) have identified that linkage group arm arrangements are largely retained among these species. Previous studies have revealed that up to 7 regions of high duplicate marker retention occur between Salmo species (i.e., Atlantic salmon and brown trout) and rainbow trout, with 5 of these regions exhibiting higher levels of pseudolinkage. Pseudolinkage was detected in the charr species (i.e., BC-1/21, AC-12/27, AC-6/23, = RT-2p/29q, RT-12p/16p, and RT-27p/31p, respectively) consistent with three of the five 'salmonid-specific' pseudolinkage regions. Chromosome arms with the highest number of duplicated markers in rainbow trout are the linkage group arms with the highest retention of duplicated markers in both charr species.

Highlights

  • Salmonids are regarded as 4R derivative species, having experienced 4 whole genome duplication events in their ancestry

  • The presence of multivalents during meiosis, tetrasomic segregation at some loci, and the retention of large numbers of duplicated gene copies as syntenic clusters on homologous chromosome arms suggests that the genome duplication event was autopolyploid in nature

  • We have tentatively identified both of these linkage group arms as BC-16 but denote the second HL3 cluster as BC-16b in Additional File 1

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Summary

Introduction

Salmonids are regarded as 4R derivative species, having experienced 4 whole genome duplication events in their ancestry. The formation of quadrivalents during meiosis leads to pseudolinkage This phenomenon is more prevalent within 5 of the 12 ancestral teleost linkage groups in salmonids. Tetrasomic segregation is expected to prevail as a result of quadrivalent formations during meiosis following a whole genome duplication event. The gradual decay towards modes of disomic segregation from the increasing formations of paired sets of bivalents during meiosis is expected through time [7]. Both modes of gamete segregation have been observed in species such as rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) [7], and complete disomic inheritance has not yet been restored in any salmonid species [6,8]

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