4.5 Article

Autosomal and Mitochondrial Adaptation Following Admixture: ACase Study on theHoneybees of Reunion Island

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages 220-238

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evx247

Keywords

adaptation; genomics/proteomics; insects; molecular evolution

Funding

  1. SeqApiPop programme - FranceAgriMer grant [14-21-AT]
  2. INRA Departement de Genetique Animale (INRA Animal Genetics division)
  3. Commissariat aux Grands Invetissements [ANR-10-INBS-0009]
  4. project e-PRPV
  5. project EPIBIO-OI
  6. Region Reunion
  7. CIRAD
  8. European Union (ERDF)

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The honeybee population of the tropical Reunion Island is a genetic admixture of the Apismellifera unicolor subspecies, originally described in Madagascar, and of European subspecies, mainly A. m. carnica and A. m. ligustica, regularly imported to the island since the late 19th century. We took advantage of this population to study genetic admixing of the tropical-adapted indigenous and temperate-adapted European genetic backgrounds. Whole genome sequencing of 30 workers and 6 males from Reunion, compared with samples from Europe, Madagascar, Mauritius, Rodrigues, and the Seychelles, revealed the Reunion honeybee population to be composed on an average of 53.26 +/- 5.9% A. m. unicolor nuclear genomic background, the rest being mainly composed of A. m. carnica and to a lesser extent A. m. ligustica. In striking contrast to this, only 1 out of the 36 honeybees from Reunion had a mitochondrial genome of European origin, suggesting selection has favored the A. m. unicolor mitotype, which is possibly better adapted to the island's bioclimate. Local ancestry was determined along the chromosomes for all Reunion samples, and a test for preferential selection for the A. m. unicolor or European background revealed 15 regions significantly associated with the A. m. unicolor lineage and 9 regions with the European lineage. Our results provide insights into the long-term consequences of introducing exotic specimen on the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes of locally adapted populations.

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