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Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels

Human‐mediated transport creates secondary contacts between genetically differentiated lineages, bringing new opportunities for gene exchange. When similar introductions occur in different places, they provide informally replicated experiments for studying hybridisation. We here examined 4,279 Mytil...

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Autores principales: Simon, Alexis, Arbiol, Christine, Nielsen, Einar Eg, Couteau, Jérôme, Sussarellu, Rossana, Burgeot, Thierry, Bernard, Ismaël, Coolen, Joop W. P., Lamy, Jean‐Baptiste, Robert, Stéphane, Skazina, Maria, Strelkov, Petr, Queiroga, Henrique, Cancio, Ibon, Welch, John J., Viard, Frédérique, Bierne, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7045717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32431737
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12879
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author Simon, Alexis
Arbiol, Christine
Nielsen, Einar Eg
Couteau, Jérôme
Sussarellu, Rossana
Burgeot, Thierry
Bernard, Ismaël
Coolen, Joop W. P.
Lamy, Jean‐Baptiste
Robert, Stéphane
Skazina, Maria
Strelkov, Petr
Queiroga, Henrique
Cancio, Ibon
Welch, John J.
Viard, Frédérique
Bierne, Nicolas
author_facet Simon, Alexis
Arbiol, Christine
Nielsen, Einar Eg
Couteau, Jérôme
Sussarellu, Rossana
Burgeot, Thierry
Bernard, Ismaël
Coolen, Joop W. P.
Lamy, Jean‐Baptiste
Robert, Stéphane
Skazina, Maria
Strelkov, Petr
Queiroga, Henrique
Cancio, Ibon
Welch, John J.
Viard, Frédérique
Bierne, Nicolas
author_sort Simon, Alexis
collection PubMed
description Human‐mediated transport creates secondary contacts between genetically differentiated lineages, bringing new opportunities for gene exchange. When similar introductions occur in different places, they provide informally replicated experiments for studying hybridisation. We here examined 4,279 Mytilus mussels, sampled in Europe and genotyped with 77 ancestry‐informative markers. We identified a type of introduced mussels, called “dock mussels,” associated with port habitats and displaying a particular genetic signal of admixture between M. edulis and the Mediterranean lineage of M. galloprovincialis. These mussels exhibit similarities in their ancestry compositions, regardless of the local native genetic backgrounds and the distance separating colonised ports. We observed fine‐scale genetic shifts at the port entrance, at scales below natural dispersal distance. Such sharp clines do not fit with migration‐selection tension zone models, and instead suggest habitat choice and early‐stage adaptation to the port environment, possibly coupled with connectivity barriers. Variations in the spread and admixture patterns of dock mussels seem to be influenced by the local native genetic backgrounds encountered. We next examined departures from the average admixture rate at different loci, and compared human‐mediated admixture events, to naturally admixed populations and experimental crosses. When the same M. galloprovincialis background was involved, positive correlations in the departures of loci across locations were found; but when different backgrounds were involved, no or negative correlations were observed. While some observed positive correlations might be best explained by a shared history and saltatory colonisation, others are likely produced by parallel selective events. Altogether, genome‐wide effect of admixture seems repeatable and more dependent on genetic background than environmental context. Our results pave the way towards further genomic analyses of admixture, and monitoring of the spread of dock mussels both at large and at fine spacial scales.
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spelling pubmed-70457172020-05-19 Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels Simon, Alexis Arbiol, Christine Nielsen, Einar Eg Couteau, Jérôme Sussarellu, Rossana Burgeot, Thierry Bernard, Ismaël Coolen, Joop W. P. Lamy, Jean‐Baptiste Robert, Stéphane Skazina, Maria Strelkov, Petr Queiroga, Henrique Cancio, Ibon Welch, John J. Viard, Frédérique Bierne, Nicolas Evol Appl Special Issue Original Articles Human‐mediated transport creates secondary contacts between genetically differentiated lineages, bringing new opportunities for gene exchange. When similar introductions occur in different places, they provide informally replicated experiments for studying hybridisation. We here examined 4,279 Mytilus mussels, sampled in Europe and genotyped with 77 ancestry‐informative markers. We identified a type of introduced mussels, called “dock mussels,” associated with port habitats and displaying a particular genetic signal of admixture between M. edulis and the Mediterranean lineage of M. galloprovincialis. These mussels exhibit similarities in their ancestry compositions, regardless of the local native genetic backgrounds and the distance separating colonised ports. We observed fine‐scale genetic shifts at the port entrance, at scales below natural dispersal distance. Such sharp clines do not fit with migration‐selection tension zone models, and instead suggest habitat choice and early‐stage adaptation to the port environment, possibly coupled with connectivity barriers. Variations in the spread and admixture patterns of dock mussels seem to be influenced by the local native genetic backgrounds encountered. We next examined departures from the average admixture rate at different loci, and compared human‐mediated admixture events, to naturally admixed populations and experimental crosses. When the same M. galloprovincialis background was involved, positive correlations in the departures of loci across locations were found; but when different backgrounds were involved, no or negative correlations were observed. While some observed positive correlations might be best explained by a shared history and saltatory colonisation, others are likely produced by parallel selective events. Altogether, genome‐wide effect of admixture seems repeatable and more dependent on genetic background than environmental context. Our results pave the way towards further genomic analyses of admixture, and monitoring of the spread of dock mussels both at large and at fine spacial scales. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7045717/ /pubmed/32431737 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12879 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Special Issue Original Articles
Simon, Alexis
Arbiol, Christine
Nielsen, Einar Eg
Couteau, Jérôme
Sussarellu, Rossana
Burgeot, Thierry
Bernard, Ismaël
Coolen, Joop W. P.
Lamy, Jean‐Baptiste
Robert, Stéphane
Skazina, Maria
Strelkov, Petr
Queiroga, Henrique
Cancio, Ibon
Welch, John J.
Viard, Frédérique
Bierne, Nicolas
Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title_full Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title_fullStr Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title_full_unstemmed Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title_short Replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
title_sort replicated anthropogenic hybridisations reveal parallel patterns of admixture in marine mussels
topic Special Issue Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7045717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32431737
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12879
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