Chromosomal inversions harbour excess mutational load in the coral, Acropora kenti, on the Great Barrier Reef

Author:

Zhang Jia123,Schneller Nadja M.124,Field Matt A.125,Chan Cheong Xin3ORCID,Miller David J.12ORCID,Strugnell Jan M.267ORCID,Riginos Cynthia89ORCID,Bay Line9,Cooke Ira12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

2. Centre for Tropical Bioinformatics and Molecular Biology James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

3. Australian Centre for Ecogenomics, School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

4. School of Biological Sciences Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Immunogenomics Lab Garvan Institute of Medical Research Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

7. College of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

8. School of the Environment The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

9. Australian Institute of Marine Science Townsville Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe future survival of coral reefs in the Anthropocene depends on the capacity of corals to adapt as oceans warm and extreme weather events become more frequent. Targeted interventions designed to assist evolutionary processes in corals require a comprehensive understanding of the distribution and structure of standing variation, however, efforts to map genomic variation in corals have so far focussed almost exclusively on SNPs, overlooking structural variants that have been shown to drive adaptive processes in other taxa. Here, we show that the reef‐building coral, Acropora kenti, harbours at least five large, highly polymorphic structural variants, all of which exhibit signatures of strongly suppressed recombination in heterokaryotypes, a feature commonly associated with chromosomal inversions. Based on their high minor allele frequency, uniform distribution across habitats and elevated genetic load, we propose that these inversions in A. kenti are likely to be under balancing selection. An excess of SNPs with high impact on protein‐coding genes within these loci elevates their importance both as potential targets for adaptive selection and as contributors to genetic decline if coral populations become fragmented or inbred in future.

Publisher

Wiley

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