4.6 Article

Genomic Analysis Reveals Subdivision of Black Rats (Rattus rattus) in India, Origin of theWorldwide Species Spread

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13020267

Keywords

commensalism; Indian subcontinent; Indus civilization; invasive; population genomics

Funding

  1. DBT-CREST award [18/MMB/2012-2013]

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This study used a genomic approach to analyze R. rattus in the Indian peninsula and found distinct geographic differentiation within the species in India, as well as signals of admixture between two subpopulations.
In contrast to the detailed and globally extensive studies on the spread of the commensal black rat, Rattus rattus, there has been relatively little work on the phylogeography of the species within India, from where this spread originated. Taking a genomic approach, we typed 27 R. rattus samples from Peninsular India using the genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) method. Filtering and alignment of the FASTQ files yielded 1499 genome-wide SNPs. Phylogenomic tree reconstruction revealed a distinct subdivision in the R. rattus population, manifested as two clusters corresponding to the east and west coasts of India. We also identified signals of admixture between these two subpopulations, separated by an Fst of 0.20. This striking genomic difference between the east and west coast populations mirrors what has previously been described with mitochondrial DNA sequencing. It is notable that the west coast population of R. rattus has been spread globally, reflecting the origins of commensalism of the species inWestern India and the subsequent transport by humans worldwide.

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