Forest Adriana R, Semeniuk Christina A D, Heath Daniel D, Pitcher Trevor E
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, University of Windsor, Ontario, N9B 3P4, Canada.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, N9B 3P4, Canada.
Genetica. 2016 Aug;144(4):477-85. doi: 10.1007/s10709-016-9917-y. Epub 2016 Jul 23.
Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, exhibit alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) where males exist in two phenotypes: large "hooknose" males and smaller "jacks" that reach sexual maturity after only 1 year in seawater. The mechanisms that determine "jacking rate"-the rate at which males precociously sexually mature-are known to involve both genetics and differential growth rates, where individuals that become jacks exhibit higher growth earlier in life. The additive genetic components have been studied and it is known that jack sires produce significantly more jack offspring than hooknose sires, and vice versa. The current study was the first to investigate both additive and non-additive genetic components underlying jacking through the use of a full-factorial breeding design using all hooknose sires. The effect of dams and sires descendant from a marker-assisted broodstock program that identified "high performance" and "low performance" lines using growth- and survival-related gene markers was also studied. Finally, the relative growth of jack, hooknose, and female offspring was examined. No significant dam, sire, or interaction effects were observed in this study, and the maternal, additive, and non-additive components underlying jacking were small. Differences in jacking rates in this study were determined by dam performance line, where dams that originated from the low performance line produced significantly more jacks. Jack offspring in this study had a significantly larger body size than both hooknose males and females starting 1 year post-fertilization. This study provides novel information regarding the genetic architecture underlying ARTs in Chinook salmon that could have implications for the aquaculture industry, where jacks are not favoured due to their small body size and poor flesh quality.
奇努克鲑(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)表现出替代生殖策略(ARTs),其中雄性存在两种表型:大型“钩鼻”雄鱼和较小的“杰克”雄鱼,后者在海水中仅1年后就达到性成熟。已知决定“杰克化率”(即雄性早熟性成熟的速率)的机制涉及遗传学和不同的生长速率,其中成为“杰克”的个体在生命早期表现出更高的生长速度。已经对加性遗传成分进行了研究,并且已知“杰克”雄鱼产生的“杰克”后代明显多于“钩鼻”雄鱼,反之亦然。本研究首次通过使用全因子育种设计,利用所有“钩鼻”雄鱼来研究“杰克化”背后的加性和非加性遗传成分。还研究了来自标记辅助亲鱼计划的雌鱼和雄鱼后代的影响,该计划使用与生长和存活相关的基因标记来识别“高性能”和“低性能”品系。最后,检查了“杰克”、“钩鼻”和雌性后代的相对生长情况。在本研究中未观察到显著的雌鱼、雄鱼或交互作用效应,并且“杰克化”背后的母体、加性和非加性成分都很小。本研究中“杰克化率”的差异由雌鱼的性能品系决定,来自低性能品系的雌鱼产生的“杰克”明显更多。本研究中的“杰克”后代自受精后1年起,其体型明显大于“钩鼻”雄鱼和雌鱼。本研究提供了关于奇努克鲑替代生殖策略背后遗传结构的新信息,这可能对水产养殖业有影响,因为“杰克”因其体型小和肉质差而不受青睐。