Runs of homozygosity in killer whale genomes provide a global record of demographic histories

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  • Andrew D. Foote
  • Rebecca Hooper
  • Alana Alexander
  • Robin W. Baird
  • Charles Scott Baker
  • Lisa Ballance
  • Jay Barlow
  • Andrew Brownlow
  • Tim Collins
  • Rochelle Constantine
  • Luciano Dalla Rosa
  • Nicholas J. Davison
  • John W. Durban
  • Ruth Esteban
  • Laurent Excoffier
  • Sarah L. Fordyce Martin
  • Karin A. Forney
  • Tim Gerrodette
  • Christophe Guinet
  • M. Bradley Hanson
  • Songhai Li
  • Michael D. Martin
  • Kelly M. Robertson
  • Filipa I. P. Samarra
  • Renaud de Stephanis
  • Sara B. Tavares
  • Paul Tixier
  • John A. Totterdell
  • Paul Wade
  • Jochen B. W. Wolf
  • Guangyi Fan
  • Yaolei Zhang
  • Phillip A. Morin

Runs of homozygosity (ROH) occur when offspring inherit haplotypes that are identical by descent from each parent. Length distributions of ROH are informative about population history; specifically, the probability of inbreeding mediated by mating system and/or population demography. Here, we investigated whether variation in killer whale (Orcinus orca) demographic history is reflected in genome-wide heterozygosity and ROH length distributions, using a global data set of 26 genomes representative of geographic and ecotypic variation in this species, and two F1 admixed individuals with Pacific-Atlantic parentage. We first reconstructed demographic history for each population as changes in effective population size through time using the pairwise sequential Markovian coalescent (PSMC) method. We found a subset of populations declined in effective population size during the Late Pleistocene, while others had more stable demography. Genomes inferred to have undergone ancestral declines in effective population size, were autozygous at hundreds of short ROH (<1 Mb), reflecting high background relatedness due to coalescence of haplotypes deep within the pedigree. In contrast, longer and therefore younger ROH (>1.5 Mb) were found in low latitude populations, and populations of known conservation concern. These include a Scottish killer whale, for which 37.8% of the autosomes were comprised of ROH >1.5 Mb in length. The fate of this population, in which only two adult males have been sighted in the past five years, and zero fecundity over the last two decades, may be inextricably linked to its demographic history and consequential inbreeding depression.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftMolecular Ecology
Vol/bind30
Udgave nummer23
Sider (fra-til)6162-6177
Antal sider16
ISSN0962-1083
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2021

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
The sequencing service was provided by GeneWiz (genewiz.com) and the Genomics Core Facility (GCF), Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). GCF is funded by the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at NTNU and Central Norway Regional Health Authority. A.D.F. was supported by a short visit grant from the European Science Foundation–Research Networking Programme ConGenOmics and by a Swiss National Science Foundation grant (31003A‐143393) to L. Excoffier, and by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska‐Curie grant agreement No. 663830. MTPG acknowledges ERC Consolidator Award 681396‐Extinction Genomics. Additional genomic sequencing was funded by Mridula Srinivasan, Protected Species Science Branch, NOAA Fisheries Office of Science and Technology. We also thank James McBain and Debbie Duffield for providing DNA. We thank Anna Hewett for feedback on our Biorxiv preprint, Marty Kardos and 2 anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback on an earlier draft submitted to Current Biology, and Martin Stoffel and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on our submission to – all of this input greatly improved the manuscript. Marty Kardos also generously provided R‐code for estimating the relationship between ROH length and recombination rate. Molecular Ecology

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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