Effects of crossovers between homeologs on inheritance and population genomics in polyploid-derived salmonid fishes
- PMID: 25838153
- DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esv015
Effects of crossovers between homeologs on inheritance and population genomics in polyploid-derived salmonid fishes
Abstract
A whole genome duplication occurred in the ancestor of all salmonid fishes some 50-100 million years ago. Early inheritance studies with allozymes indicated that loci in the salmonid genome are inherited disomically in females. However, some pairs of duplicated loci showed patterns of inheritance in males indicating pairing and recombination between homeologous chromosomes. Nearly 20% of loci in the salmonid genome are duplicated and share the same alleles (isoloci), apparently due to homeologous recombination. Half-tetrad analysis revealed that isoloci tend to be telomeric. These results suggested that residual tetrasomic inheritance of isoloci results from homeologous recombination near chromosome ends and that continued disomic inheritance resulted from homologous pairing of centromeric regions. Many current genetic maps of salmonids are based on single nucleotide polymorphisms and microsatellites that are no longer duplicated. Therefore, long sections of chromosomes on these maps are poorly represented, especially telomeric regions. In addition, preferential multivalent pairing of homeologs from the same species in F1 hybrids results in an excess of nonparental gametes (so-called pseudolinkage). We consider how not including duplicated loci has affected our understanding of population and evolutionary genetics of salmonids, and we discuss how incorporating these loci will benefit our understanding of population genomics.
Keywords: Salmonidae; homeologs; interference; ohnologs; pseudolinkage; residual tetrasomy.
© The American Genetic Association 2015. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Comment in
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Meiotic Models to Explain Classical Linkage, Pseudolinkage, and Chromosomal Pairing in Tetraploid Derivative Salmonid Genomes: II. Wright is Still Right.J Hered. 2015 Nov-Dec;106(6):762-6. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esv056. Epub 2015 Aug 29. J Hered. 2015. PMID: 26320244 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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Response to May and Delany: We Never Said Wright was Wrong.J Hered. 2015 Nov-Dec;106(6):767-8. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esv072. Epub 2015 Aug 29. J Hered. 2015. PMID: 26320245 No abstract available.
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