4.3 Article

Developing a High-Quality Linkage Map for the Atlantic Killifish Fundulus heteroclitus

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages 2851-2862

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1534/g3.119.400262

Keywords

Atlantic Killifish; meiotic linkage map; RAD-Seq; genome synteny; scaffold inversions

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences [1R01ES021934-01]
  2. National Science Foundation [OCE-1314567, DEB-1265282]
  3. Postdoctoral Research Program at the U.S. Environmental Protection (US EPA) Office of Research and Development
  4. U.S. Department of Energy [DW92429801]
  5. US EPA [DW92429801]

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Killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus) are widely distributed among different aquatic environments where they demonstrate an impressive range of highly-plastic and locally adaptive phenotypes. High-throughput sequencing has begun to unravel the mechanisms and evolutionary history of these interesting features by establishing relationships in the genotype-phenotype map. However, some genotype-phenotype analyses require a higher order of contiguity than what initial scaffolded (fragmented genome assembly where contigs have been assemble into scaffolds) genome assemblies can provide. Here, we used 5,685 high-quality RAD-Seq markers from a single mapping family to order 84% of the scaffolded genome assembly to 24 chromosomes. This serves to: 1) expand the killifish genomic toolkit, 2) estimate genome-wide recombination rates, and 3) compare genome synteny to humans and other fishes. After initially building our map, we found that the selection of thresholds for sequence data filtration highly impacted scaffold placement in the map. We outline each step of the approach that dramatically improved our map to help guide others toward more effective linkage mapping for genome assembly. Our final map supports strong conservation of genomic synteny among closely related fish species and reveals previously described chromosomal rearrangements between more distantly related clades. However, we also commonly found minor scaffold misorientations in F. heteroclitus and in other assemblies, suggesting that further mapping (such as optical mapping) is necessary for finer scale resolution of genome structure. Lastly, we discuss the problems that would be expected from misoriented/unplaced scaffolds and stress the importance of a quality mapped genome as a key feature for further investigating population and comparative genomic questions with F. heteroclitus and other taxa.

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