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The evolutionary origin and domestication history of goldfish (Carassius auratus).

Duo ChenQing ZhangWeiqi TangZhen HuangGang WangYongjun WangJiaxian ShiHuimin XuLianyu LinZhen LiWenchao ChiLikun HuangJing XiaXingtan ZhangLin GuoYuanyuan WangPanpan MaJuan TangGang ZhouMin LiuFuyan LiuXiuting HuaBaiyu WangQiaochu ShenQing JiangJingxian LinXuequn ChenHongbo WangMeijie DouLei LiuHaoran PanYiying QiBin WuJingping FangYitao ZhouWan CenWenjin HeQiujin ZhangTing XueGang LinWenchun ZhangZhongjian LiuLiming QuAiming WangQichang YeJianming ChenYanding ZhangRay MingMarc Van MontaguHaibao TangYves Van de PeerYouqiang ChenJi-Sen Zhang
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Goldfish have been subjected to over 1,000 y of intensive domestication and selective breeding. In this report, we describe a high-quality goldfish genome (2n = 100), anchoring 95.75% of contigs into 50 pseudochromosomes. Comparative genomics enabled us to disentangle the two subgenomes that resulted from an ancient hybridization event. Resequencing 185 representative goldfish variants and 16 wild crucian carp revealed the origin of goldfish and identified genomic regions that have been shaped by selective sweeps linked to its domestication. Our comprehensive collection of goldfish varieties enabled us to associate genetic variations with a number of well-known anatomical features, including features that distinguish traditional goldfish clades. Additionally, we identified a tyrosine-protein kinase receptor as a candidate causal gene for the first well-known case of Mendelian inheritance in goldfish-the transparent mutant. The goldfish genome and diversity data offer unique resources to make goldfish a promising model for functional genomics, as well as domestication.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • single cell
  • protein kinase
  • dna methylation
  • electronic health record