Abstract
Birds, mammals, and certain fishes, including tunas, opahs and lamnid sharks, are endothermic, conserving internally generated, metabolic heat to maintain body or tissue temperatures above that of the environment. Bluefin tunas are commercially important fishes worldwide, and some populations are threatened. They are renowned for their endothermy, maintaining elevated temperatures of the oxidative locomotor muscle, viscera, brain and eyes, and occupying cold, productive high-latitude waters. Less cold-tolerant tunas, such as yellowfin tuna, by contrast, remain in warm-temperate to tropical waters year-round, reproducing more rapidly than most temperate bluefin tuna populations, providing resiliency in the face of large-scale industrial fisheries. Despite the importance of these traits to not only fisheries but also habitat utilization and responses to climate change, little is known of the genetic processes underlying the diversification of tunas. In collecting and analyzing sequence data across 29,556 genes, we found that parallel selection on standing genetic variation is associated with the evolution of endothermy in bluefin tunas. This includes two shared substitutions in genes encoding glycerol-3 phosphate dehydrogenase, an enzyme that contributes to thermogenesis in bumblebees and mammals, as well as four genes involved in the Krebs cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, β-oxidation, and superoxide removal. Using phylogenetic techniques, we further illustrate that the eight Thunnus species are genetically distinct, but found evidence of mitochondrial genome introgression across two species. Phylogeny-based metrics highlight conservation needs for some of these species.
Highlights
The Thunnus tuna clade consists of some of the most commercially important fish species in the world
To elucidate the evolutionary history of Thunnus, and to learn more about the evolution of endothermy, in the bluefin tuna and visceral endotherm groups, we collected RNA-sequence data for 25 individual tunas, supplementing NCBI Short Read Archive data to reach a total of 46 individuals
We first generated a merged de novo assembly based on 102 unique assemblies from skeletal muscle and heart tissue of three individual Pacific bluefin tuna
Summary
The Thunnus tuna clade consists of some of the most commercially important fish species in the world. All tuna species ( including the genera Euthynnus, Auxis, Katsuwonus, and Allothunnus) are regionally endothermic Taxonomists initially split tunas of the genus Thunnus into two subgenera based on morphological characters: the tropical Neothunnus (including yellowfin, blackfin [T. atlanticus], and longtail [T. tonggol]) and the more ß The Author(s) 2018.
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