Nanopore Amplicon Sequencing Reveals Molecular Convergence and Local Adaptation of Rhodopsin in Great Lakes Salmonids

Author:

Eaton Katherine M1,Bernal Moisés A1,Backenstose Nathan J C1,Yule Daniel L2,Krabbenhoft Trevor J13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo, New York, USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, Great Lakes Science Center – Lake Superior Biological Station, Ashland, Wisconsin, USA

3. RENEW Institute, University at Buffalo, New York, USA

Abstract

Abstract Local adaptation can drive diversification of closely related species across environmental gradients and promote convergence of distantly related taxa that experience similar conditions. We examined a potential case of adaptation to novel visual environments in a species flock (Great Lakes salmonids, genus Coregonus) using a new amplicon genotyping protocol on the Oxford Nanopore Flongle and MinION. We sequenced five visual opsin genes for individuals of Coregonus artedi, Coregonus hoyi, Coregonus kiyi, and Coregonus zenithicus. Comparisons revealed species-specific differences in a key spectral tuning amino acid in rhodopsin (Tyr261Phe substitution), suggesting local adaptation of C. kiyi to the blue-shifted depths of Lake Superior. Ancestral state reconstruction demonstrates that parallel evolution and “toggling” at this amino acid residue has occurred several times across the fish tree of life, resulting in identical changes to the visual systems of distantly related taxa across replicated environmental gradients. Our results suggest that ecological differences and local adaptation to distinct visual environments are strong drivers of both evolutionary parallelism and diversification.

Funder

Great Lakes Fishery Commission

University at Buffalo Department of Biological Sciences

University at Buffalo Honors College

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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