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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Comparison of Migratory and Resident Populations of Brown Trout Reveals Candidate Genes for Migration Tendency
Silva Uusi-heikkiläSilva Uusi-heikkiläAnssi VainikkaAlexandre LemopoulosAlexandre LemopoulosAnti VasemägiAri Huuskosubject
0301 basic medicineCandidate geneTroutPopulationlife-history strategyFresh WaterSingle-nucleotide polymorphismPolymorphism Single NucleotideLife history theoryEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesBrown troutsmoltificationOsmoregulationtaimenbrown troutpopulaatiotsalmonidsGeneticsAnimalsSeawatermigration tendency14. Life underwaterSalmoeducationgenesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSmoltificationmigratory populationseducation.field_of_studyvaelluskalatgeenitbiologyta1184RADseqbiology.organism_classificationTrout030104 developmental biologyEvolutionary biologypopulaatiogenetiikkata1181Animal Migrationmigratory behaviorresident populationsSalmonidaeResearch Articledescription
Abstract Candidate genes associated with migration have been identified in multiple taxa: including salmonids, many of whom perform migrations requiring a series of physiological changes associated with the freshwater–saltwater transition. We screened over 5,500 SNPs for signatures of selection related to migratory behavior of brown trout Salmo trutta by focusing on ten differentially migrating freshwater populations from two watersheds (the Koutajoki and the Oulujoki). We found eight outlier SNPs potentially associated with migratory versus resident life history using multiple (≥3) outlier detection approaches. Comparison of three migratory versus resident population pairs in the Koutajoki watershed revealed seven outlier SNPs, of which three mapped close to genes ZNF665-like, GRM4-like, and PCDH8-like that have been previously associated with migration and smoltification in salmonids. Two outlier SNPs mapped to genes involved in mucus secretion (ST3GAL1-like) and osmoregulation (C14orf37-like). The last two strongly supported outlier SNPs mapped to thermally induced genes (FNTA1-like, FAM134C-like). Within the Oulujoki, the only consistent outlier SNP mapped close to a gene (EZH2) that is associated with compensatory growth in fasted trout. Our results suggest that a relatively small yet common set of genes responsible for physiological functions associated with resident and migratory life histories is evolutionarily conserved.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-01-01 | Genome Biology and Evolution |