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Functional differences between TSHR alleles associate with variation in spawning season in Atlantic herring

Authors :
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
Research Council of Norway
European Commission
China Scholarship Council
German Research Foundation
Uppsala University
Swedish Research Council
Chen, Junfeng
Bi, Huijuan
Pettersson, Mats E.
Sato, Daiki X.
Fuentes-Pardo, Angela P.
Mo, Chunheng
Younis, Shady
Wallerman, Ola
Jern, Patric
Molés, Gregorio
Gómez Peris, A.
Kleinau, Gunnar
Scheerer, Patrick
Andersson, Leif
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
Research Council of Norway
European Commission
China Scholarship Council
German Research Foundation
Uppsala University
Swedish Research Council
Chen, Junfeng
Bi, Huijuan
Pettersson, Mats E.
Sato, Daiki X.
Fuentes-Pardo, Angela P.
Mo, Chunheng
Younis, Shady
Wallerman, Ola
Jern, Patric
Molés, Gregorio
Gómez Peris, A.
Kleinau, Gunnar
Scheerer, Patrick
Andersson, Leif
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The underlying molecular mechanisms that determine long day versus short day breeders remain unknown in any organism. Atlantic herring provides a unique opportunity to examine the molecular mechanisms involved in reproduction timing, because both spring and autumn spawners exist within the same species. Although our previous whole genome comparisons revealed a strong association of TSHR alleles with spawning seasons, the functional consequences of these variants remain unknown. Here we examined the functional significance of six candidate TSHR mutations strongly associated with herring reproductive seasonality. We show that the L471M missense mutation in the spring-allele causes enhanced cAMP signaling. The best candidate non-coding mutation is a 5.2 kb retrotransposon insertion upstream of the TSHR transcription start site, near an open chromatin region, which is likely to affect TSHR expression. The insertion occurred prior to the split between Pacific and Atlantic herring and was lost in the autumn-allele. Our study shows that strongly associated coding and non-coding variants at the TSHR locus may both contribute to the regulation of seasonal reproduction in herring.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1333183243
Document Type :
Electronic Resource