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The Genomic Signature and Transcriptional Response of Metal Tolerance in Brown Trout Inhabiting Metal-Polluted Rivers

The Genomic Signature and Transcriptional Response of Metal Tolerance in Brown Trout Inhabiting Metal-Polluted Rivers
The Genomic Signature and Transcriptional Response of Metal Tolerance in Brown Trout Inhabiting Metal-Polluted Rivers
Industrial pollution is a major driver of ecosystem degradation, but it can also act as a driver of contemporary evolution. As a result of intense mining activity during the Industrial Revolution, several rivers across the southwest of England are polluted with high concentrations of metals. Despite the documented negative impacts of ongoing metal pollution, brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) survive and thrive in many of these metal-impacted rivers. We used population genomics, transcriptomics, and metal burdens to investigate the genomic and transcriptomic signatures of potential metal tolerance. RADseq analysis of six populations (originating from three metal-impacted and three control rivers) revealed strong genetic substructuring between impacted and control populations. We identified selection signatures at 122 loci, including genes related to metal homeostasis and oxidative stress. Trout sampled from metal-impacted rivers exhibited significantly higher tissue concentrations of cadmium, copper, nickel and zinc, which remained elevated after 11 days in metal-free water. After depuration, we used RNAseq to quantify gene expression differences between metal-impacted and control trout, identifying 2042 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the gill, and 311 DEGs in the liver. Transcriptomic signatures in the gill were enriched for genes involved in ion transport processes, metal homeostasis, oxidative stress, hypoxia, and response to xenobiotics. Our findings reveal shared genomic and transcriptomic pathways
involved in detoxification, oxidative stress responses and ion regulation. Overall, our results demonstrate the diverse effects of metal pollution in shaping both neutral and adaptive genetic variation, whilst also highlighting the potential role of constitutive
gene expression in promoting metal tolerance.
RADseq, RNAseq, adaptation, freshwater, pollution, toxic metals
0962-1083
Paris, Josie
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King, Andrew
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Obiol, Joan
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Shaw, Sophie
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Lange, Anke
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Bourret, Vincent
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Hamilton, Patrick
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Rowe, Darren
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Laing, Lauren
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Farbos, Audrey
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Moore, Karen
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Rubina, Mauricio
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van Aerle, Ronny
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Catchen, Julian
f489ebc5-b1b5-4784-93a6-f387203b88c1
Wilson, Rod
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Bury, Nic
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Santos, Eduarda
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Stevens, Jamie
599473a8-74d3-4f81-8fbb-e0dd51c0d02c
Paris, Josie
998dbd0f-cf07-42fc-ae66-52a7baf9b548
King, Andrew
27884ed7-2a2e-4a82-a94b-f02e620568ed
Obiol, Joan
eac9a92e-c444-4a3a-9d22-ee803b0df63d
Shaw, Sophie
ba600eaa-72da-467b-8d15-d4137521549d
Lange, Anke
c5b5a19b-3c68-464d-95c9-c1ec50584f7d
Bourret, Vincent
695cc29a-1948-4a56-8707-fa562494aab0
Hamilton, Patrick
42d4ea92-e682-432e-8019-fa25da80b8e8
Rowe, Darren
feb5aa09-ef0e-40b8-b0ba-1748ff116cf1
Laing, Lauren
1104bd78-716a-4f87-bd00-c798c28386b7
Farbos, Audrey
3af30ea8-f5e0-4801-97d1-296d27018cfd
Moore, Karen
89f841be-54b3-4dd0-a2a5-f3efebd812fc
Rubina, Mauricio
504cd5b8-0c8f-4c3b-bf6c-f1dddc836e4c
van Aerle, Ronny
8565b345-2f4d-4ae2-a449-dd768bda1030
Catchen, Julian
f489ebc5-b1b5-4784-93a6-f387203b88c1
Wilson, Rod
7834d9a6-4abd-486f-b10e-9ba892ce32f3
Bury, Nic
696daba0-5cc9-444c-be9a-c678808712c6
Santos, Eduarda
3241f97e-8be7-46e9-9b40-5d6dd7a2d774
Stevens, Jamie
599473a8-74d3-4f81-8fbb-e0dd51c0d02c

Paris, Josie, King, Andrew, Obiol, Joan, Shaw, Sophie, Lange, Anke, Bourret, Vincent, Hamilton, Patrick, Rowe, Darren, Laing, Lauren, Farbos, Audrey, Moore, Karen, Rubina, Mauricio, van Aerle, Ronny, Catchen, Julian, Wilson, Rod, Bury, Nic, Santos, Eduarda and Stevens, Jamie (2024) The Genomic Signature and Transcriptional Response of Metal Tolerance in Brown Trout Inhabiting Metal-Polluted Rivers. Molecular Ecology, 34 (1), [e17591]. (doi:10.1111/mec.17591).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Industrial pollution is a major driver of ecosystem degradation, but it can also act as a driver of contemporary evolution. As a result of intense mining activity during the Industrial Revolution, several rivers across the southwest of England are polluted with high concentrations of metals. Despite the documented negative impacts of ongoing metal pollution, brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) survive and thrive in many of these metal-impacted rivers. We used population genomics, transcriptomics, and metal burdens to investigate the genomic and transcriptomic signatures of potential metal tolerance. RADseq analysis of six populations (originating from three metal-impacted and three control rivers) revealed strong genetic substructuring between impacted and control populations. We identified selection signatures at 122 loci, including genes related to metal homeostasis and oxidative stress. Trout sampled from metal-impacted rivers exhibited significantly higher tissue concentrations of cadmium, copper, nickel and zinc, which remained elevated after 11 days in metal-free water. After depuration, we used RNAseq to quantify gene expression differences between metal-impacted and control trout, identifying 2042 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the gill, and 311 DEGs in the liver. Transcriptomic signatures in the gill were enriched for genes involved in ion transport processes, metal homeostasis, oxidative stress, hypoxia, and response to xenobiotics. Our findings reveal shared genomic and transcriptomic pathways
involved in detoxification, oxidative stress responses and ion regulation. Overall, our results demonstrate the diverse effects of metal pollution in shaping both neutral and adaptive genetic variation, whilst also highlighting the potential role of constitutive
gene expression in promoting metal tolerance.

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Molecular Ecology - 2024 - Paris - The Genomic Signature and Transcriptional Response of Metal Tolerance in Brown Trout - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 November 2024
Published date: 19 November 2024
Keywords: RADseq, RNAseq, adaptation, freshwater, pollution, toxic metals

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496709
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496709
ISSN: 0962-1083
PURE UUID: 68f6e97b-c0e3-444c-94aa-121134ad3571
ORCID for Nic Bury: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6048-6338

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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2025 22:05
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Josie Paris
Author: Andrew King
Author: Joan Obiol
Author: Sophie Shaw
Author: Anke Lange
Author: Vincent Bourret
Author: Patrick Hamilton
Author: Darren Rowe
Author: Lauren Laing
Author: Audrey Farbos
Author: Karen Moore
Author: Mauricio Rubina
Author: Ronny van Aerle
Author: Julian Catchen
Author: Rod Wilson
Author: Nic Bury ORCID iD
Author: Eduarda Santos
Author: Jamie Stevens

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