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Dive into the research topics where Kristina M. Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristina M. Miller.


Evolution | 2007

CLINAL VARIATION IN MHC DIVERSITY WITH TEMPERATURE: EVIDENCE FOR THE ROLE OF HOST–PATHOGEN INTERACTION ON LOCAL ADAPTATION IN ATLANTIC SALMON

Mélanie Dionne; Kristina M. Miller; Julian J. Dodson; François Caron; Louis Bernatchez

Abstract In vertebrates, variability at genes of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) represents an important adaptation for pathogen resistance, whereby high allelic diversity confers resistance to a greater number of pathogens. Pathogens can maintain diversifying selection pressure on their hosts immune system that can vary in intensity based on pathogen richness, pathogen virulence, and length of the cohabitation period, which tend to increase with temperature. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that genetic diversity of MHC increases with temperature along a latitudinal gradient in response to pathogen selective pressure in the wild. A total of 1549 Atlantic salmon from 34 rivers were sampled between 46°N and 58°N in Eastern Canada. The results supported our working hypothesis. In contrast to the overall pattern observed at microsatellites, MHC class II allelic diversity increased with temperature, thus creating a latitudinal gradient. The observed temperature gradient was more pronounced for MHC amino acids of the peptide-binding region (PBR), a region that specifically binds to pathogens, than for the non-PBR. For the subset of rivers analyzed for bacterial diversity, MHC amino acid diversity of the PBR also increased significantly with bacterial diversity in each river. A comparison of the relative influence of temperature and bacterial diversity revealed that the latter could have a predominant role on MHC PBR variability. However, temperature was also identified as an important selective agent maintaining MHC diversity in the wild. Based on the bacteria results and given the putative role of temperature in shaping large-scale patterns of pathogen diversity and virulence, bacterial diversity is a plausible selection mechanism explaining the observed association between temperature and MHC variability. Therefore, we propose that genetic diversity at MHC class II represents local adaptation to cope with pathogen diversity in rivers associated with different thermal regimes. This study illuminates the link between selection pressure from the environment, host immune adaptation, and the large-scale genetic population structure for a nonmodel vertebrate in the wild.


Science | 2011

Genomic Signatures Predict Migration and Spawning Failure in Wild Canadian Salmon

Kristina M. Miller; Shaorong Li; Karia H. Kaukinen; Norma Ginther; Edd Hammill; Janelle M. R. Curtis; David Patterson; Thomas Sierocinski; Louise Donnison; Paul Pavlidis; Scott G. Hinch; Kimberly A. Hruska; Steven J. Cooke; Karl K. English; Anthony P. Farrell

High mortality of sockeye salmon in the Fraser River is associated with signals of metabolic and immune stress. Long-term population viability of Fraser River sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) is threatened by unusually high levels of mortality as they swim to their spawning areas before they spawn. Functional genomic studies on biopsied gill tissue from tagged wild adults that were tracked through ocean and river environments revealed physiological profiles predictive of successful migration and spawning. We identified a common genomic profile that was correlated with survival in each study. In ocean-tagged fish, a mortality-related genomic signature was associated with a 13.5-fold greater chance of dying en route. In river-tagged fish, the same genomic signature was associated with a 50% increase in mortality before reaching the spawning grounds in one of three stocks tested. At the spawning grounds, the same signature was associated with 3.7-fold greater odds of dying without spawning. Functional analysis raises the possibility that the mortality-related signature reflects a viral infection.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2005

Estimation of Stock Composition and Individual Identification of Sockeye Salmon on a Pacific Rim Basis Using Microsatellite and Major Histocompatibility Complex Variation

Terry D. Beacham; John R. Candy; Brenda McIntosh; Cathy MacConnachie; Amy Tabata; Karia H. Kaukinen; Langtuo Deng; Kristina M. Miller; Ruth E. Withler; Natalia Varnavskaya

Abstract The variation at 14 microsatellite loci and one major histocompatibility complex (MHC) locus was surveyed for over 48,000 sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka sampled from 299 localities ranging from the Columbia River to Japan. For the microsatellite loci, the number of alleles observed at a locus was related to the power of the locus in providing accurate estimates of stock composition of single-population mixtures. In an analysis of single-population mixtures where the Pacific Rim baseline was used for estimation of stock identification, 80% accuracy for the average population was achieved by employing approximately 80 alleles in the analysis. Increasing the accuracy of estimated stock compositions to 90% for the average population required approximately 400 microsatellite alleles. When all loci were used to estimate stock compositions, estimates were above 80% for all sampling sites or populations, above 90% for the lake of origin, and generally above 95% for the region of origin. Analysis of kn...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2004

Stock Identification of Fraser River Sockeye Salmon Using Microsatellites and Major Histocompatibility Complex Variation

Terry D. Beacham; Michael Lapointe; John R. Candy; Brenda McIntosh; Cathy MacConnachie; Amy Tabata; Karia H. Kaukinen; Langtuo Deng; Kristina M. Miller; Ruth E. Withler

Abstract The utility of DNA-based variation for stock identification was evaluated for Fraser River sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka. For this evaluation, the variation at 14 microsatellite loci and one major histocompatibility complex (MHC) locus was determined from approximately 13,000 fish from 47 populations in the drainage. Genetic differentiation among the populations was observed, the overall F ST value for the 14 microsatellite loci surveyed being 0.054 and that for the MHC locus being 0.215. The variation among regions and populations within regions was approximately 20 times as great as that of the annual variation within populations for the microsatellite loci and 28 times as great for the MHC locus. The power of a microsatellite locus for population-specific identification in simulated mixture samples was positively correlated with the number of observed alleles at the locus. Analysis of simulated mixtures indicated that the mean percentage error of estimated stock compositions was less than ...


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2009

MHC standing genetic variation and pathogen resistance in wild Atlantic salmon

Mélanie Dionne; Kristina M. Miller; Julian J. Dodson; Louis Bernatchez

Pathogens are increasingly emerging in human-altered environments as a serious threat to biodiversity. In this context of rapid environmental changes, improving our knowledge on the interaction between ecology and evolution is critical. The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of an immunocompetence gene, the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class IIβ, on the pathogen infection levels in wild Atlantic salmon populations, Salmo salar, and identify selective agents involved in contemporary coevolution. MHC variability and bacterial infection rate were determined throughout the summer in juvenile salmon from six rivers belonging to different genetic and ecological regions in Québec, Canada. A total of 13 different pathogens were identified in kidney by DNA sequence analysis, including a predominant myxozoa, most probably recently introduced in North America. Infection rates were the highest in southern rivers at the beginning of the summer (average 47.6±6.3% infected fish). One MHC allele conferred a 2.9 times greater chance of being resistant to myxozoa, while another allele increased susceptibility by 3.4 times. The decrease in frequency of the susceptibility allele but not other MHC or microsatellite alleles during summer was suggestive of a mortality event from myxozoa infection. These results supported the hypothesis of pathogen-driven selection in the wild by means of frequency-dependent selection or change in selection through time and space rather than heterozygous advantage, and underline the importance of MHC standing genetic variation for facing pathogens in a changing environment.


Immunogenetics | 1996

Sequence analysis of a polymorphic Mhc class II gene in Pacific salmon

Kristina M. Miller; Ruth E. Withler

Polymorphism of the nucleotide sequences encoding 149 amino acids of linked major histocompatibility complex (Mhc) class II 131 and 132 peptides, and of the intervening intron (548–773 base pairs), was examined within and among seven Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus) species. Levels of nucleotide diversity were higher for theB1 sequence than forB2 or the intron in comparisons both within and between species. For the codons of the peptide binding region of the BI sequence, the level of nonsynonymous nucleotide substitution (dN) exceeded the level of synonymous substitution (dS) by a factor of ten for within-species comparisons, and by a factor of four for between-species comparisons. The excess of dN indicates that balancing selection maintains diversity at this salmonidMhc class II locus, as is common forMhc loci in other vertebrates. Levels of nucleotide diversity for both the exon and intron sequences were greater among than within species, and there were numerous species-specific nucleotides present in both the coding and noncoding regions. Thus, neighbor-joining analysis of both the intron and exon regions provided phylogenies in which the sequences clustered strongly by species. There was little evidence of shared ancestral (trans-species) polymorphism in the exon phylogeny, and the intron phylogeny depicted standard relationships among the Pacific salmon species. The lack of shared allelicB1 lineages in these closely related species may result from severe bottlenecks that occurred during speciation or during the ice ages that glaciated the rim of the north Pacific Ocean approximately every 100 000 years in the Pleistocene.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2004

Major histocompatibility complex loci are associated with susceptibility of Atlantic salmon to infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus

Kristina M. Miller; James R. Winton; Angela D. Schulze; Maureen K. Purcell; Tobi J. Ming

Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) is one of the most significant viral pathogens of salmonids and is a leading cause of death among cultured juvenile fish. Although several vaccine strategies have been developed, some of which are highly protective, the delivery systems are still too costly for general use by the aquaculture industry. More cost effective methods could come from the identification of genes associated with IHNV resistance for use in selective breeding. Further, identification of susceptibility genes may lead to an improved understanding of viral pathogenesis and may therefore aid in the development of preventive and therapeutic measures. Genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), involved in the primary recognition of foreign pathogens in the acquired immune response, are associated with resistance to a variety of diseases in vertebrate organisms. We conducted a preliminary analysis of MHC disease association in which an aquaculture strain of Atlantic salmon was challenged with IHNV at three different doses and individual fish were genotyped at three MHC loci using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE), followed by sequencing of all differentiated alleles. Nine to fourteen alleles per exon-locus were resolved, and alleles potentially associated with resistance or susceptibility were identified. One allele (Sasa-B-04) from a potentially non-classical class I locus was highly associated with resistance to infectious hematopoietic necrosis (p < 0.01). This information can be used to design crosses of specific haplotypes for family analysis of disease associations.


Evolutionary Applications | 2014

Infectious disease, shifting climates, and opportunistic predators: cumulative factors potentially impacting wild salmon declines

Kristina M. Miller; Amy K. Teffer; Strahan Tucker; Shaorong Li; Angela D. Schulze; Marc Trudel; Francis Juanes; Amy Tabata; Karia H. Kaukinen; Norma Ginther; Tobi J. Ming; Steven J. Cooke; J. Mark Hipfner; David Patterson; Scott G. Hinch

Emerging diseases are impacting animals under high‐density culture, yet few studies assess their importance to wild populations. Microparasites selected for enhanced virulence in culture settings should be less successful maintaining infectivity in wild populations, as once the host dies, there are limited opportunities to infect new individuals. Instead, moderately virulent microparasites persisting for long periods across multiple environments are of greatest concern. Evolved resistance to endemic microparasites may reduce susceptibilities, but as barriers to microparasite distributions are weakened, and environments become more stressful, unexposed populations may be impacted and pathogenicity enhanced. We provide an overview of the evolutionary and ecological impacts of infectious diseases in wild salmon and suggest ways in which modern technologies can elucidate the microparasites of greatest potential import. We present four case studies that resolve microparasite impacts on adult salmon migration success, impact of river warming on microparasite replication, and infection status on susceptibility to predation. Future health of wild salmon must be considered in a holistic context that includes the cumulative or synergistic impacts of multiple stressors. These approaches will identify populations at greatest risk, critically needed to manage and potentially ameliorate the shifts in current or future trajectories of wild populations.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2006

Estimation of Stock Composition and Individual Identification of Chinook Salmon across the Pacific Rim by Use of Microsatellite Variation

Terry D. Beacham; John R. Candy; Kimberly L. Jonsen; Janine Supernault; Michael Wetklo; Langtuo Deng; Kristina M. Miller; Ruth E. Withler; Natalia Varnavskaya

Abstract Variation at 13 microsatellite loci was surveyed for over 52,000 Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha sampled from 325 localities ranging from Russia to California; the variation was applied to estimate stock composition in mixed-stock fishery samples. A rapid increase in the accuracy of estimated stock composition in simulated mixtures with respect to population sample size was observed for sample sizes of up to about 75 individuals, at which point a 90% accuracy of assignment to population was achieved. The number of alleles observed at a locus was related to the power of the locus in providing accurate estimates of the stock composition of single-population mixtures. In analysis of single-population mixtures where the Pacific Rim baseline was used for estimation of stock identification, 75% accuracy for the average population was achieved by employing approximately 55 alleles in the analysis. Increasing the accuracy of the estimated stock composition to 90% for the average population requir...


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D: Genomics and Proteomics | 2009

Salmon spawning migration: metabolic shifts and environmental triggers.

Kristina M. Miller; Angela D. Schulze; Norma Ginther; Shaorong Li; David Patterson; Anthony P. Farrell; Scott G. Hinch

A large-scale functional genomics study revealed shifting metabolic processes in white muscle during the final 1300 km migration of wild sockeye salmon to their spawning grounds in the Fraser River, British Columbia. In 2006, Lower Adams stock sockeye salmon ceased feeding after passing the Queen Charlotte Islands, 850 km from the Fraser River. Enhanced protein turnover and reduced transcription of actin, muscle contractile and heme-related proteins were early starvation responses in saltwater. Arrival to the estuarine environment triggered massive protein turnover through induction of proteasomal and lysosomal proteolysis and protein biosynthesis, and a shift from anaerobic glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation. Response to entry into freshwater was modest, with up-regulation of heat shock proteins and nitric oxide biosynthesis. High river temperatures resulted in a strong defense/immune response and high mortalities in 50% of fish. Arrival to the spawning grounds triggered further up-regulation of oxidative phosphorylation and proteolysis, down-regulation of protein biosynthesis and helicase activity, and continued down-regulation of muscle proteins and most glycolytic enzymes. However, sharp up-regulation of PFK-I indicated induction of glycolytic potential at the spawning grounds. The identification of potential environmental cues triggering genome-wide transcriptional shifts in white muscle associated with migration and the strong activation of proteasomal proteolysis were both novel findings.

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Karia H. Kaukinen

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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Ruth E. Withler

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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Terry D. Beacham

University of British Columbia

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Angela D. Schulze

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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David Patterson

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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Scott G. Hinch

University of British Columbia

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Shaorong Li

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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Anthony P. Farrell

University of British Columbia

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John R. Candy

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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