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Chromosome-scale genomes reveal genomic consequences of inbreeding in the South China tiger: A comparative study with the Amur tiger

Authors :
Le Zhang
Tianming Lan
Chuyu Lin
Wenyuan Fu
Yaohua Yuan
Kaixiong Lin
Haimeng Li
Sunil Kumar Sahu
Zhaoyang Liu
Daqing Chen
Qunxiu Liu
Aishan Wang
Xiaohong Wang
Yue Ma
Shizhou Li
Yixin Zhu
Xingzhuo Wang
Xiaotong Ren
Haorong Lu
Yunting Huang
Jieyao Yu
Boyang Liu
Qing Wang
Shaofang Zhang
Xun Xu
Huanming Yang
Dan Liu
Huan Liu
Yanchun Xu
Source :
Molecular ecology resourcesREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The South China tiger (Panthera tigris amoyensis, SCT) is the most critically endangered subspecies of tiger due to functional extinction in the wild. Inbreeding depression is observed among the captive population descended from six wild ancestors, resulting in high juvenile mortality and low reproduction. We assembled and characterized the first SCT genome and an improved Amur tiger (P. t. altaica, AT) genome named AmyTig1.0 and PanTig2.0. The two genomes are the most continuous and comprehensive among any tiger genomes yet reported at the chromosomal level. By using the two genomes and resequencing data of 15 SCT and 13 AT individuals, we investigated the genomic signature of inbreeding depression of the SCT. The results indicated that the effective population size of SCT experienced three phases of decline, ~5.0-1.0 thousand years ago, 100 years ago, and since captive breeding in 1963. We found 43 long runs of homozygosity fragments that were shared by all individuals in the SCT population and covered a total length of 20.63% in the SCT genome. We also detected a large proportion of identical-by-descent segments across the genome in the SCT population, especially on ChrB4. Deleterious nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphic sites and loss-of-function mutations were found across genomes with extensive potential influences, despite a proportion of these loads having been purged by inbreeding depression. Our research provides an invaluable resource for the formulation of genetic management policies for the South China tiger such as developing genome-based breeding and genetic rescue strategy.

Details

ISSN :
17550998
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular ecology resourcesREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c5da66531d684a7f5bc12e4b0fc5d7b