Sabatino Stephen J, Cabezas M Pilar, Pereira Paulo, Garrido Susana, Santos António M, Carneiro Miguel, Santos Paulo T, Louro Bruno, Cox Cymon J, Canário Adelino V M, Veríssimo Ana
CIBIO-InBIO, Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources, University of Porto, Vairão, Portugal.
BIOPOLIS Program in Genomics, Biodiversity and Land Planning, CIBIO, Vairão, Portugal.
Mol Ecol. 2025 Aug;34(16):e70027. doi: 10.1111/mec.70027. Epub 2025 Jul 25.
Inversions can play key roles in the genetic architecture of adaptation, but the scale of their effects across different species remains poorly understood. Here, we use whole-genome sequencing and demographic modelling to investigate the influence of inversions on the population genomics of the r-selected European sardine (Sardina pilchardus). Allele frequency differences from millions of SNPs across 34 populations spanning the species' range were analysed. Genomic scans identified several extreme outlier regions overlapping large inversions (29-52 Mbp), collectively representing over half the genome. Our findings suggest these inversions correlate with locally adapted life-history strategies. First, SNPs within outlier regions containing inversions exhibited striking allele frequency differences between Atlantic and Mediterranean sardines, which differ in key adaptive life-history traits. In the Atlantic, inversion allele frequencies varied latitudinally, while in the Mediterranean, they shifted longitudinally, aligning with temperature and oceanographic features that influence sardine life-history strategies. Moreover, adjacent populations in contrasting environments exhibited pronounced differences in inversion allele frequencies, accompanied by a marked reduction in migration between them. In contrast, spatial patterns at neutral loci showed widespread gene flow, isolation by distance within basins, and population structure between Atlantic and Mediterranean basins (except for the Canary Islands). These results suggest that the inversions studied are under selection and demonstrate the capacity of large inversions to shape genome-wide patterns of genetic diversity and population structure in species characterized by widespread gene flow. Our work also offers crucial insights for stock delimitation and management of this commercially valuable species in the face of climate change.
倒位在适应性的遗传结构中可能发挥关键作用,但其在不同物种间的影响规模仍知之甚少。在此,我们利用全基因组测序和种群统计学模型,研究倒位对r选择型欧洲沙丁鱼(Sardina pilchardus)种群基因组学的影响。分析了跨越该物种分布范围的34个种群中数百万个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)的等位基因频率差异。基因组扫描识别出几个与大型倒位(29 - 52兆碱基对)重叠的极端异常区域,这些区域总计占基因组的一半以上。我们的研究结果表明,这些倒位与局部适应的生活史策略相关。首先,包含倒位的异常区域内的SNP在大西洋和地中海沙丁鱼之间表现出显著的等位基因频率差异,这两种沙丁鱼在关键的适应性生活史特征上有所不同。在大西洋,倒位等位基因频率随纬度变化,而在地中海,它们沿经度变化,与影响沙丁鱼生活史策略的温度和海洋学特征一致。此外,处于对比环境中的相邻种群在倒位等位基因频率上表现出明显差异,同时它们之间的迁移显著减少。相比之下,中性位点的空间模式显示出广泛的基因流动、盆地内的距离隔离以及大西洋和地中海盆地之间的种群结构(加那利群岛除外)。这些结果表明所研究的倒位正受到选择,并证明了大型倒位在以广泛基因流动为特征的物种中塑造全基因组遗传多样性和种群结构模式的能力。我们的工作还为面对气候变化时该商业价值物种的种群界定和管理提供了关键见解。