Transcriptomic and genomic variants between koala populations reveals underlying genetic components to disorders in a bottlenecked population

Author:

Tarlinton R. E.ORCID,Fabijan J.ORCID,Hemmatzadeh F.ORCID,Meers J.ORCID,Owen H.,Sarker N.ORCID,Seddon J. M.ORCID,Simmons G.ORCID,Speight N.ORCID,Trott D. J.ORCID,Woolford L.ORCID,Emes R. D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractHistorical hunting pressures on koalas in the southern part of their range in Australia have led to a marked genetic bottleneck when compared with their northern counterparts. There are a range of suspected genetic disorders such as testicular abnormalities, oxalate nephrosis and microcephaly reported at higher prevalence in these genetically restricted southern animals. This paper reports analysis of differential expression of genes from RNAseq of lymph nodes, SNPs present in genes and the fixation index (population differentiation due to genetic structure) of these SNPs from two populations, one in south east Queensland, representative of the northern genotype and one in the Mount Lofty Ranges South Australia, representative of the southern genotype. SNPs that differ between these two populations were significantly enriched in genes associated with brain diseases. Genes which were differentially expressed between the two populations included many associated with brain development or disease, and in addition a number associated with testicular development, including the androgen receptor. Finally, one of the 8 genes both differentially expressed and with a statistical difference in SNP frequency between populations was SLC26A6 (solute carrier family 26 member 6), an anion transporter that was upregulated in SA koalas and is associated with oxalate transport and calcium oxalate uroliths in humans. Together the differences in SNPs and gene expression described in this paper suggest an underlying genetic basis for several disorders commonly seen in southern Australian koalas, supporting the need for further research into the genetic basis of these conditions, and highlighting that genetic selection in managed populations may need to be considered in the future.

Funder

Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Queensland Government

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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