How structural variants shape avian phenotypes: Lessons from model systems

Author:

Recuerda María1ORCID,Campagna Leonardo12

Affiliation:

1. Fuller Evolutionary Biology Program Cornell Lab of Ornithology Ithaca New York USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

Abstract

AbstractDespite receiving significant recent attention, the relevance of structural variation (SV) in driving phenotypic diversity remains understudied, although recent advances in long‐read sequencing, bioinformatics and pangenomic approaches have enhanced SV detection. We review the role of SVs in shaping phenotypes in avian model systems, and identify some general patterns in SV type, length and their associated traits. We found that most of the avian SVs so far identified are short indels in chickens, which are frequently associated with changes in body weight and plumage colouration. Overall, we found that relatively short SVs are more frequently detected, likely due to a combination of their prevalence compared to large SVs, and a detection bias, stemming primarily from the widespread use of short‐read sequencing and associated analytical methods. SVs most commonly involve non‐coding regions, especially introns, and when patterns of inheritance were reported, SVs associated primarily with dominant discrete traits. We summarise several examples of phenotypic convergence across different species, mediated by different SVs in the same or different genes and different types of changes in the same gene that can lead to various phenotypes. Complex rearrangements and supergenes, which can simultaneously affect and link several genes, tend to have pleiotropic phenotypic effects. Additionally, SVs commonly co‐occur with single‐nucleotide polymorphisms, highlighting the need to consider all types of genetic changes to understand the basis of phenotypic traits. We end by summarising expectations for when long‐read technologies become commonly implemented in non‐model birds, likely leading to an increase in SV discovery and characterisation. The growing interest in this subject suggests an increase in our understanding of the phenotypic effects of SVs in upcoming years.

Funder

Division of Environmental Biology

Publisher

Wiley

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