Velotta Jonathan P, Iqbal Azwad R, Glenn Emma S, Franckowiak Ryan P, Formenti Giulio, Mountcastle Jacquelyn, Balacco Jennifer, Tracey Alan, Sims Ying, Howe Kerstin, Fedrigo Olivier, Jarvis Erich D, Therkildsen Nina O
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80210, USA.
Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Genome Biol Evol. 2025 Jan 6;17(1). doi: 10.1093/gbe/evae276.
Transitions across ecological boundaries, such as those separating freshwater from the sea, are major drivers of phenotypic innovation and biodiversity. Despite their importance to evolutionary history, we know little about the mechanisms by which such transitions are accomplished. To help shed light on these mechanisms, we generated the first high-quality, near-complete assembly and annotation of the genome of the American shad (Alosa sapidissima), an ancestrally diadromous (migratory between salinities) fish in the order Clupeiformes of major cultural and historical significance. Among the Clupeiformes, there is a large amount of variation in salinity habitat and many independent instances of salinity boundary crossing, making this taxon well-suited for studies of mechanisms underlying ecological transitions. Our initial analysis of the American shad genome reveals several unique insights for future study including: (i) that genomic repeat content is among the highest of any fish studied to date; (ii) that genome-wide heterozygosity is low and may be associated with range-wide population collapses since the 19th century; and (iii) that natural selection has acted on the branch leading to the diadromous genus Alosa. Our analysis suggests that functional targets of natural selection may include diet, particularly lipid metabolism, as well as cytoskeletal remodeling and sensing of salinity changes. Natural selection on these functions is expected in the transition from a marine to diadromous life history, particularly in the tolerance of nutrient- and ion-devoid freshwater. We anticipate that our assembly of the American shad genome will be used to test future hypotheses on adaptation to novel environments, the origins of diadromy, and adaptive variation in life history strategies, among others.
跨越生态边界,比如分隔淡水与海洋的边界,是表型创新和生物多样性的主要驱动因素。尽管它们对进化史很重要,但我们对这种转变是如何实现的机制却知之甚少。为了帮助阐明这些机制,我们首次生成了美国西鲱(Alosa sapidissima)基因组的高质量、近乎完整的组装和注释,美国西鲱是鲱形目一种具有重要文化和历史意义的溯河洄游(在不同盐度间洄游)鱼类。在鲱形目中,盐度栖息地存在大量变异,并且有许多独立的跨越盐度边界的实例,这使得这个分类群非常适合用于研究生态转变背后的机制。我们对美国西鲱基因组的初步分析揭示了几个可供未来研究的独特见解,包括:(i)基因组重复序列含量是迄今为止所研究的任何鱼类中最高的;(ii)全基因组杂合度较低,可能与自19世纪以来种群在整个分布范围内的崩溃有关;(iii)自然选择作用于通向溯河洄游的西鲱属的分支。我们分析表明,自然选择的功能靶点可能包括饮食,特别是脂质代谢,以及细胞骨架重塑和盐度变化感知。从海洋到溯河洄游生活史的转变中,尤其是在对缺乏营养和离子的淡水的耐受性方面,预计会对这些功能进行自然选择。我们预计,我们对美国西鲱基因组的组装将用于检验未来关于适应新环境、溯河洄游的起源以及生活史策略中的适应性变异等方面的假设。