4.3 Article

Whole-genome sequencing revealed different demographic histories among the Korean endemic hill pigeon (Columba rupestris), rock pigeon (Columba livia var. domestica) and oriental turtle dove (Streptopelia orientalis)

Journal

GENES & GENOMICS
Volume 44, Issue 10, Pages 1231-1242

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13258-022-01288-z

Keywords

Rock pigeon (Columba livia var; domestica); Oriental turtle dove (Streptopelia orientalis); Hill pigeon (C; rupestris); Whole-genome sequencing; Genome variation; Demographic analysis; NDP protein

Funding

  1. National Institute of Biological Resources (NIBR) - Ministry of Environment (MOE), Republic of Korea [NIBR201803101]
  2. Ministry of Environment (ME), Republic of Korea [NIBR201803101] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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This study sequenced and analyzed the genomes of three different pigeon species, revealing that intergenus variations were more significant than intragenus variations. The relationship between the rock pigeon and oriental turtle dove was found to be closer compared to the hill pigeon. Additionally, all three bird species underwent a common population bottleneck in the past 100,000 years.
Background The family Columbidae is known as the pigeon family and contains approximately 351 species and 50 genera. Compared to the wealth of biological and genomic information on these Columba livia var. domesteca, information on Columba rupestris and Streptopelia orientalis has been rather limited. The C. rupestris population size is decreasing in Korea. Objectives Whole-genome sequencing and identification of population characterization of each species based genome variation on 9 Korean pigeon and dove samples, namely, six hill pigeon (C. rupestris), one rock pigeon (C. livia var. domestica) and two oriental turtle dove (S. orientalis) samples. Results The whole genome of 9 genotypes were sequenced and mapped to the C. livia reference genome. Sequence alignment showed over 96% identity in C. rupestris and 94% identity in S. orientalis to the reference genome (GenBank assembly accession: GCA_001887795.1). Sequence variations, including single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), insertions and deletions (InDels), and structural variations, revealed that intergenus (Columba vs. Streptopelia) variations were approximately four times higher than intragenus variations (C. livia vs. C. rupestris). Of the two Columba species, C. livia var. domestica is closer to S. orientalis than C. rupestris. Pairwise sequentially Markovian coalescent (PSMC) demographic history analysis revealed that the three species underwent a common population bottleneck between 105 and 120 Kya; since then, the effective population sizes of the rock pigeon and oriental turtle dove have increased. Conclusion The effective population size of the hill pigeon, an Endangered Species of Grade II in Korea, has increased slowly from the second severe bottleneck that occurred approximately 0.5-1.4 x 10(4) years ago. Our results showed no relationship between copy number variation in the Norrie disease protein (NDP) regulatory regions and plumage color patterns. We report the first comparative analysis of three pigeon genomes.

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