Temperature-Associated selection linked to putative chromosomal inversions in king scallop (Pecten maximus)

Date

2022-09-08

Authors

Hollenbeck, Christopher
Portnoy, David
Garcia de la serrana, Daniel
Magnesen, Thorolf
matejusova, iveta
Johnston, Ian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

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Abstract

The genomic landscape of divergence—the distribution of differences among populations or species across the genome—is increasingly characterized to understand the role that microevolutionary forces such as natural selection and recombination play in causing and maintaining genetic divergence. This line of inquiry has also revealed chromosome structure variation to be an important factor shaping the landscape of adaptive genetic variation. Owing to a high prevalence of chromosome structure variation and the strong pressure for local adaptation necessitated by their sessile nature, bivalve molluscs are an ideal taxon for exploring the relationship between chromosome structure variation and local adaptation. Here, we report a population genomic survey of king scallop (Pecten maximus) across its natural range in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, using a recent chromosome-level genome assembly. We report the presence of at least three large (12–22 Mb), putative chromosomal inversions associated with sea surface temperature and whose frequencies are in contrast to neutral population structure. These results highlight a potentially large role for recombination-suppressing chromosomal inversions in local adaptation and suggest a hypothesis to explain the maintenance of differences in reproductive timing found at relatively small spatial scales across king scallop populations.

Description

Keywords

local adaptation, chromosomal inversion, population genomics, molluscs

Sponsorship

This study was initiated as part of the European Marine Bio-logical Research Infrastructure Cluster (EMBRIC) project funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation pro-gramme under grant agreement no. 654008. The sequencing service was provided by the Norwegian Sequencing Centre (www.sequen-cing.uio.no), a national technology platform hosted by the University of Oslo and supported by the ‘Functional Genomics’ and ‘Infrastructure’ programmes of the Research Council of Norway and the Southeastern Regional Health Authorities.

Rights:

Attribution 4.0 International

Citation

Hollenbeck CM, Portnoy DS, Garcia de la serrana D, Magnesen T, Matejusova I, Johnston IA. 2022 Temperature-associated selection linked to putative chromosomal inversions in king scallop (Pecten maximus).Proc. R. Soc. B289: 20221573. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.1573