1. Moderate nucleotide diversity in the Atlantic herring is associated with a low mutation rate.
- Author
-
Feng C, Pettersson M, Lamichhaney S, Rubin CJ, Rafati N, Casini M, Folkvord A, and Andersson L
- Subjects
- Animals, Whole Genome Sequencing, Fishes genetics, Mutation Rate, Nucleotides genetics
- Abstract
The Atlantic herring is one of the most abundant vertebrates on earth but its nucleotide diversity is moderate (π = 0.3%), only three-fold higher than in human. Here, we present a pedigree-based estimation of the mutation rate in this species. Based on whole-genome sequencing of four parents and 12 offspring, the estimated mutation rate is 2.0 × 10
-9 per base per generation. We observed a high degree of parental mosaicism indicating that a large fraction of these de novo mutations occurred during early germ cell development. The estimated mutation rate - the lowest among vertebrates analyzed to date - partially explains the discrepancy between the rather low nucleotide diversity in herring and its huge census population size. But a species like the herring will never reach its expected nucleotide diversity because of fluctuations in population size over the millions of years it takes to build up high nucleotide diversity.- Published
- 2017
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