4.6 Article

Population genetic characteristics of Hainan medaka with whole-genome resequencing

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.946006

Keywords

Oryzias curvinotus; population genetics; genetics structure; population history; positive selection

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of China
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [2020A1515410009]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China Youth Fund [31972794]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong [41806195]
  5. [2022A1515011441]

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In this study, we resequenced the whole genome of four populations of Oryzias curvinotus, including the SY-medaka population. The results showed that the genetic differentiation between SY-medaka and other populations is the highest. The population history analysis suggested that SY-medaka has recently experienced a bottleneck period and is strongly affected by environmental selection. We also identified potential genomic regions and genes that may explain the selection process of SY-medaka.
The DMY gene is deleted in all males of the Sanya population (SY-medaka) of the Hainan medaka, Oryzias curvinotus, as recently reported by us. However, due to limited knowledge regarding their population genetic background, it is difficult to explore the possible evolutionary pathway. Herein, we resequenced the whole genome of four populations, including SY-medaka. A total of 56 mitogenomes and 32,826,105 SNPs were identified. We found that the genetic differentiation is highest between SY-medaka and the other populations. The results of the population history of the O. curvinotus suggest that the SY-medaka has been in a bottleneck period recently. Further analysis shows that SY-medaka are the most strongly affected by environmental selection. Moreover, we screened some potential genomic regions, and the genes contained in these regions may explain the potential mechanism of the selection process of the SY-medaka. In conclusion, our study can provide new clues for the adaptation process of medaka in the new environment of Sanya.

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