Abstract

Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) is a commercially and culturally important species to the people that live along the northern Pacific Ocean coast. There are two main sockeye salmon ecotypes-the ocean-going (anadromous) ecotype and the fresh-water ecotype known as kokanee. The goal of this study was to better understand the population structure of sockeye salmon and identify possible genomic differences among populations and between the two ecotypes. In pursuit of this goal, we generated the first reference sockeye salmon genome assembly and an RNA-seq transcriptome data set to better annotate features of the assembly. Resequenced whole-genomes of 140 sockeye salmon and kokanee were analyzed to understand population structure and identify genomic differences between ecotypes. Three distinct geographic and genetic groups were identified from analyses of the resequencing data. Nucleotide variants in an immunoglobulin heavy chain variable gene cluster on chromosome 26 were found to differentiate the northwestern group from the southern and upper Columbia River groups. Several candidate genes were found to be associated with the kokanee ecotype. Many of these genes were related to ammonia tolerance or vision. Finally, the sex chromosomes of this species were better characterized, and an alternative sex-determination mechanism was identified in a subset of upper Columbia River kokanee.

Highlights

  • Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) are one of eight species of Pacific salmon and trout native to the North Pacific Ocean where they are of tremendous economic and cultural significance

  • The genome assembly was submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) (GenBank assembly accession: GCA_006149115.1, BioProject: PRJNA530256)

  • The metrics reported on the NCBI website were: total sequence length ~1.9 Gbp, number of scaffolds: 38,027, scaffold N50 ~1 Mbp, contig N50 ~330 kbp

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Summary

Objectives

The goal of this study was to better understand the population structure of sockeye salmon and identify possible genomic differences among populations and between the two ecotypes

Methods
Results
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Conclusion
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