4.5 Article

Structural genomic variation and migratory behavior in a wild songbird

Journal

EVOLUTION LETTERS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/evlett/qrad040

Keywords

structural variants; haplotype-resolved de novo assembly; purifying selection; migration genetics; bird

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This study investigates structural variants (SVs) in Eurasian blackcap and finds that SVs have important evolutionary implications in natural populations, especially in relation to seasonal migration. It also identifies specific SVs associated with different migratory strategies and traits, highlighting the genetic basis of migration.
Structural variants (SVs) are a major source of genetic variation; and descriptions in natural populations and connections with phenotypic traits are beginning to accumulate in the literature. We integrated advances in genomic sequencing and animal tracking to begin filling this knowledge gap in the Eurasian blackcap. Specifically, we (a) characterized the genome-wide distribution, frequency, and overall fitness effects of SVs using haplotype-resolved assemblies for 79 birds, and (b) used these SVs to study the genetics of seasonal migration. We detected >15 K SVs. Many SVs overlapped repetitive regions and exhibited evidence of purifying selection suggesting they have overall deleterious effects on fitness. We used estimates of genomic differentiation to identify SVs exhibiting evidence of selection in blackcaps with different migratory strategies. Insertions and deletions dominated the SVs we identified and were associated with genes that are either directly (e.g., regulatory motifs that maintain circadian rhythms) or indirectly (e.g., through immune response) related to migration. We also broke migration down into individual traits (direction, distance, and timing) using existing tracking data and tested if genetic variation at the SVs we identified could account for phenotypic variation at these traits. This was only the case for 1 trait-direction-and 1 specific SV (a deletion on chromosome 27) accounted for much of this variation. Our results highlight the evolutionary importance of SVs in natural populations and provide insight into the genetic basis of seasonal migration.

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