75 results on '"Sudmant PH"'
Search Results
2. Great ape genetic diversity and population history
- Author
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Prado-Martinez J, Sudmant PH, Kidd JM, Li H, Kelley JL, Lorente-Galdos B, Veeramah KR, Woerner AE, O'Connor TD, Santpere G, Cagan A, Theunert C, Casals F, Laayouni H, Munch K, Hobolth A, Halager AE, Malig M, Hernandez-Rodriguez J, Hernando-Herraez I, Prxfcfer K, Pybus M, Johnstone L, Lachmann M, Alkan C, Twigg D, Petit N, Baker C, Hormozdiari F, Fernandez-Callejo M, Dabad M, Wilson ML, Stevison L, Camprubxed C, Carvalho T, Ruiz-Herrera A, Vives L, Mele M, Abello T, Kondova I, Bontrop RE, Pusey A, Lankester F, and K
- Published
- 2013
3. An integrated map of genetic variation from 1,092 human genomes
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Altshuler, DM, Durbin, RM, Abecasis, GR, Bentley, DR, Chakravarti, A, Clark, AG, Donnelly, P, Eichler, EE, Flicek, P, Gabriel, SB, Gibbs, RA, Green, ED, Hurles, ME, Knoppers, BM, Korbel, JO, Lander, ES, Lee, C, Lehrach, H, Mardis, ER, Marth, GT, McVean, GA, Nickerson, DA, Schmidt, JP, Sherry, ST, Wang, J, Wilson, RK, Dinh, H, Kovar, C, Lee, S, Lewis, L, Muzny, D, Reid, J, Wang, M, Fang, X, Guo, X, Jian, M, Jiang, H, Jin, X, Li, G, Li, J, Li, Y, Li, Z, Liu, X, Lu, Y, Ma, X, Su, Z, Tai, S, Tang, M, Wang, B, Wang, G, Wu, H, Wu, R, Yin, Y, Zhang, W, Zhao, J, Zhao, M, Zheng, X, Zhou, Y, Gupta, N, Clarke, L, Leinonen, R, Smith, RE, Zheng-Bradley, X, Grocock, R, Humphray, S, James, T, Kingsbury, Z, Sudbrak, R, Albrecht, MW, Amstislavskiy, VS, Borodina, TA, Lienhard, M, Mertes, F, Sultan, M, Timmermann, B, Yaspo, M-L, Fulton, L, Fulton, R, Weinstock, GM, Balasubramaniam, S, Burton, J, Danecek, P, Keane, TM, Kolb-Kokocinski, A, McCarthy, S, Stalker, J, Quail, M, Davies, CJ, Gollub, J, Webster, T, Wong, B, Zhan, Y, Auton, A, Yu, F, Bainbridge, M, Challis, D, Evani, US, Lu, J, Nagaswamy, U, Sabo, A, Wang, Y, Yu, J, Coin, LJM, Fang, L, Li, Q, Lin, H, Liu, B, Luo, R, Qin, N, Shao, H, Xie, Y, Ye, C, Yu, C, Zhang, F, Zheng, H, Zhu, H, Garrison, EP, Kural, D, Lee, W-P, Leong, WF, Ward, AN, Wu, J, Zhang, M, Griffin, L, Hsieh, C-H, Mills, RE, Shi, X, Von Grotthuss, M, Zhang, C, Daly, MJ, DePristo, MA, Banks, E, Bhatia, G, Carneiro, MO, Del Angel, G, Genovese, G, Handsaker, RE, Hartl, C, McCarroll, SA, Nemesh, JC, Poplin, RE, Schaffner, SF, Shakir, K, Yoon, SC, Lihm, J, Makarov, V, Jin, H, Kim, W, Kim, KC, Rausch, T, Beal, K, Cunningham, F, Herrero, J, McLaren, WM, Ritchie, GRS, Gottipati, S, Keinan, A, Rodriguez-Flores, JL, Sabeti, PC, Grossman, SR, Tabrizi, S, Tariyal, R, Cooper, DN, Ball, EV, Stenson, PD, Barnes, B, Bauer, M, Cheetham, RK, Cox, T, Eberle, M, Kahn, S, Murray, L, Peden, J, Shaw, R, Ye, K, Batzer, MA, Konkel, MK, Walker, JA, MacArthur, DG, Lek, M, Herwig, R, Shriver, MD, Bustamante, CD, Byrnes, JK, De la Vega, FM, Gravel, S, Kenny, EE, Kidd, JM, Lacroute, P, Maples, BK, Moreno-Estrada, A, Zakharia, F, Halperin, E, Baran, Y, Craig, DW, Christoforides, A, Homer, N, Izatt, T, Kurdoglu, AA, Sinari, SA, Squire, K, Xiao, C, Sebat, J, Bafna, V, Burchard, EG, Hernandez, RD, Gignoux, CR, Haussler, D, Katzman, SJ, Kent, WJ, Howie, B, Ruiz-Linares, A, Dermitzakis, ET, Lappalainen, T, Devine, SE, Maroo, A, Tallon, LJ, Rosenfeld, JA, Michelson, LP, Kang, HM, Anderson, P, Angius, A, Bigham, A, Blackwell, T, Busonero, F, Cucca, F, Fuchsberger, C, Jones, C, Jun, G, Lyons, R, Maschio, A, Porcu, E, Reinier, F, Sanna, S, Schlessinger, D, Sidore, C, Tan, A, Trost, MK, Awadalla, P, Hodgkinson, A, Lunter, G, Marchini, JL, Myers, S, Churchhouse, C, Delaneau, O, Gupta-Hinch, A, Iqbal, Z, Mathieson, I, Rimmer, A, Xifara, DK, Oleksyk, TK, Fu, Y, Xiong, M, Jorde, L, Witherspoon, D, Xing, J, Browning, BL, Alkan, C, Hajirasouliha, I, Hormozdiari, F, Ko, A, Sudmant, PH, Chen, K, Chinwalla, A, Ding, L, Dooling, D, Koboldt, DC, McLellan, MD, Wallis, JW, Wendl, MC, Zhang, Q, Tyler-Smith, C, Albers, CA, Ayub, Q, Chen, Y, Coffey, AJ, Colonna, V, Huang, N, Jostins, L, Li, H, Scally, A, Walter, K, Xue, Y, Zhang, Y, Gerstein, MB, Abyzov, A, Balasubramanian, S, Chen, J, Clarke, D, Habegger, L, Harmanci, AO, Jin, M, Khurana, E, Mu, XJ, Sisu, C, Degenhardt, J, Stuetz, AM, Church, D, Michaelson, JJ, Ben, B, Lindsay, SJ, Ning, Z, Frankish, A, Harrow, J, Fowler, G, Hale, W, Kalra, D, Barker, J, Kelman, G, Kulesha, E, Radhakrishnan, R, Roa, A, Smirnov, D, Streeter, I, Toneva, I, Vaughan, B, Ananiev, V, Belaia, Z, Beloslyudtsev, D, Bouk, N, Chen, C, Cohen, R, Cook, C, Garner, J, Hefferon, T, Kimelman, M, Liu, C, Lopez, J, Meric, P, O'Sullivan, C, Ostapchuk, Y, Phan, L, Ponomarov, S, Schneider, V, Shekhtman, E, Sirotkin, K, Slotta, D, Zhang, H, Barnes, KC, Beiswanger, C, Cai, H, Cao, H, Gharani, N, Henn, B, Jones, D, Kaye, JS, Kent, A, Kerasidou, A, Mathias, R, Ossorio, PN, Parker, M, Reich, D, Rotimi, CN, Royal, CD, Sandoval, K, Su, Y, Tian, Z, Tishkoff, S, Toji, LH, Via, M, Yang, H, Yang, L, Zhu, J, Bodmer, W, Bedoya, G, Ming, CZ, Yang, G, You, CJ, Peltonen, L, Garcia-Montero, A, Orfao, A, Dutil, J, Martinez-Cruzado, JC, Brooks, LD, Felsenfeld, AL, McEwen, JE, Clemm, NC, Duncanson, A, Dunn, M, Guyer, MS, Peterson, JL, 1000 Genomes Project Consortium, Dermitzakis, Emmanouil, Universitat de Barcelona, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology, Altshuler, David, and Lander, Eric S.
- Subjects
Natural selection ,LOCI ,Genome-wide association study ,Evolutionary biology ,Continental Population Groups/genetics ,Human genetic variation ,VARIANTS ,Genoma humà ,Binding Sites/genetics ,0302 clinical medicine ,RARE ,Sequence Deletion/genetics ,WIDE ASSOCIATION ,ddc:576.5 ,Copy-number variation ,MUTATION ,Exome sequencing ,transcription factor ,Conserved Sequence ,Human evolution ,Sequence Deletion ,Genetics ,RISK ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Continental Population Groups ,1000 Genomes Project Consortium ,Genetic analysis ,Genomics ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics ,Research Highlight ,3. Good health ,Algorithm ,Multidisciplinary Sciences ,Genetic Variation/genetics ,Map ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Conserved Sequence/genetics ,Integrated approach ,General Science & Technology ,Genetics, Medical ,Haplotypes/genetics ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic variation ,Humans ,Transcription Factors/metabolism ,POPULATION-STRUCTURE ,1000 Genomes Project ,Polymorphism ,Nucleotide Motifs ,Alleles ,030304 developmental biology ,COPY NUMBER VARIATION ,Science & Technology ,Binding Sites ,Human genome ,Genome, Human ,Racial Groups ,Genetic Variation ,Genetics, Population ,Haplotypes ,Genome, Human/genetics ,untranslated RNA ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Transcription Factors ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
By characterizing the geographic and functional spectrum of human genetic variation, the 1000 Genomes Project aims to build a resource to help to understand the genetic contribution to disease. Here we describe the genomes of 1,092 individuals from 14 populations, constructed using a combination of low-coverage whole-genome and exome sequencing. By developing methods to integrate information across several algorithms and diverse data sources, we provide a validated haplotype map of 38 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 1.4 million short insertions and deletions, and more than 14,000 larger deletions. We show that individuals from different populations carry different profiles of rare and common variants, and that low-frequency variants show substantial geographic differentiation, which is further increased by the action of purifying selection. We show that evolutionary conservation and coding consequence are key determinants of the strength of purifying selection, that rare-variant load varies substantially across biological pathways, and that each individual contains hundreds of rare non-coding variants at conserved sites, such as motif-disrupting changes in transcription-factor-binding sites. This resource, which captures up to 98% of accessible single nucleotide polymorphisms at a frequency of 1% in related populations, enables analysis of common and low-frequency variants in individuals from diverse, including admixed, populations., National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant RC2HL102925), National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant U54HG3067)
- Published
- 2012
4. Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans
- Author
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Lazaridis, I, Patterson, N, Mittnik, A, Renaud, G, Mallick, S, Kirsanow, K, Sudmant, Ph, Schraiber, Jg, Castellano, S, Lipson, M, Berger, B, Economou, C, Bollongino, R, Fu, Q, Bos, Ki, Nordenfelt, S, Li, H, De Filippo, C, Prüfer, K, Sawyer, S, Posth, C, Haak, W, Hallgren, F, Fornander, E, Rohland, N, Delsate, D, Francken, M, Guinet, Jm, Wahl, J, Ayodo, G, Babiker, Ha, Bailliet, G, Balanovska, E, Balanovsky, O, Bedoya, G, Ben Ami, H, Bene, J, Berrada, F, Bravi, Cm, Brisighelli, Francesca, Busby, Gb, Cali, F, Churnosov, M, Cole, De, Corach, D, Damba, L, Van Driem, G, Dryomov, S, Fedorova, Sa, Gallego Romero, I, Gubina, M, Hammer, M, Henn, Bm, Hervig, T, Hodoglugil, U, Jha, Ar, Karachanak Yankova, S, Khusainova, R, Khusnutdinova, E, Kittles, R, Kivisild, T, Kučinskas, V, Kushniarevich, A, Laredj, L, Litvinov, S, Loukidis, T, Mahley, Rw, Melegh, B, Metspalu, E, Molina, J, Mountain, J, Näkkäläjärvi, K, Nesheva, D, Nyambo, T, Osipova, L, Platonov, F, Posukh, O, Romano, V, Rothhammer, F, Rudan, I, Ruizbakiev, R, Sahakyan, H, Sajantila, A, Salas, A, Starikovskaya, Eb, Tarekegn, A, Toncheva, D, Turdikulova, S, Utevska, O, Vasquez, R, Villena, M, Voevoda, M, Winkler, Ca, Yepiskoposyan, L, Zalloua, P, Zemunik, T, Cooper, A, Capelli, C, Ruiz Linares, A, Tishkoff, Sa Et Al, Brisighelli, Francesca (ORCID:0000-0001-5469-4413), Lazaridis, I, Patterson, N, Mittnik, A, Renaud, G, Mallick, S, Kirsanow, K, Sudmant, Ph, Schraiber, Jg, Castellano, S, Lipson, M, Berger, B, Economou, C, Bollongino, R, Fu, Q, Bos, Ki, Nordenfelt, S, Li, H, De Filippo, C, Prüfer, K, Sawyer, S, Posth, C, Haak, W, Hallgren, F, Fornander, E, Rohland, N, Delsate, D, Francken, M, Guinet, Jm, Wahl, J, Ayodo, G, Babiker, Ha, Bailliet, G, Balanovska, E, Balanovsky, O, Bedoya, G, Ben Ami, H, Bene, J, Berrada, F, Bravi, Cm, Brisighelli, Francesca, Busby, Gb, Cali, F, Churnosov, M, Cole, De, Corach, D, Damba, L, Van Driem, G, Dryomov, S, Fedorova, Sa, Gallego Romero, I, Gubina, M, Hammer, M, Henn, Bm, Hervig, T, Hodoglugil, U, Jha, Ar, Karachanak Yankova, S, Khusainova, R, Khusnutdinova, E, Kittles, R, Kivisild, T, Kučinskas, V, Kushniarevich, A, Laredj, L, Litvinov, S, Loukidis, T, Mahley, Rw, Melegh, B, Metspalu, E, Molina, J, Mountain, J, Näkkäläjärvi, K, Nesheva, D, Nyambo, T, Osipova, L, Platonov, F, Posukh, O, Romano, V, Rothhammer, F, Rudan, I, Ruizbakiev, R, Sahakyan, H, Sajantila, A, Salas, A, Starikovskaya, Eb, Tarekegn, A, Toncheva, D, Turdikulova, S, Utevska, O, Vasquez, R, Villena, M, Voevoda, M, Winkler, Ca, Yepiskoposyan, L, Zalloua, P, Zemunik, T, Cooper, A, Capelli, C, Ruiz Linares, A, Tishkoff, Sa Et Al, and Brisighelli, Francesca (ORCID:0000-0001-5469-4413)
- Abstract
We sequenced the genomes of a ∼7,000-year-old farmer from Germany and eight ∼8,000-year-old hunter-gatherers from Luxembourg and Sweden. We analysed these and other ancient genomes with 2,345 contemporary humans to show that most present-day Europeans derive from at least three highly differentiated populations: west European hunter-gatherers, who contributed ancestry to all Europeans but not to Near Easterners; ancient north Eurasians related to Upper Palaeolithic Siberians, who contributed to both Europeans and Near Easterners; and early European farmers, who were mainly of Near Eastern origin but also harboured west European hunter-gatherer related ancestry. We model these populations' deep relationships and show that early European farmers had ∼44% ancestry from a 'basal Eurasian' population that split before the diversification of other non-African lineages.
- Published
- 2014
5. Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans
- Author
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Joanna L. Mountain, Michael F. Hammer, Ruslan Ruizbakiev, Cesare de Filippo, Kumarasamy Thangaraj, David E. C. Cole, Haim Ben-Ami, Leila Laredj, Mark Lipson, Jüri Parik, Valentino Romano, Andres Ruiz-Linares, Fouad Berrada, Dominique Delsate, Ugur Hodoglugil, Antti Sajantila, Olga Utevska, Shahlo Turdikulova, Tor Hervig, Ludmila P. Osipova, Hovhannes Sahakyan, Robert W. Mahley, Ramiro Barrantes, Kirsten I. Bos, Stanislav Dryomov, Peter H. Sudmant, Nadin Rohland, Heng Li, Gabriel Renaud, Mikhail Voevoda, Claudio M. Bravi, Jean-Michel Guinet, Rem I. Sukernik, Joachim Wahl, Matthias Meyer, Christos Economou, Kay Prüfer, Graciela Bailliet, Mait Metspalu, Mikhail Churnosov, Iosif Lazaridis, Johannes Krause, Bonnie Berger, Levon Yepiskoposyan, Francesca Brisighelli, Francesco Calì, Irene Gallego Romero, Oleg Balanovsky, George Ayodo, Alan Cooper, Alissa Mittnik, Julio Molina, George van Driem, Jean-Michel Dugoujon, Larissa Damba, Fedor Platonov, Nick Patterson, David Reich, Thomas B. Nyambo, David Comas, Olga L. Posukh, Béla Melegh, Draga Toncheva, Alena Kushniarevich, Brenna M. Henn, Montgomery Slatkin, René Vasquez, Elena B. Starikovskaya, Joachim Burger, Ayele Tarekegn, Tatijana Zemunik, Ene Metspalu, Sena Karachanak-Yankova, Lalji Singh, Wolfgang Haak, Susanna Sawyer, Rick A. Kittles, Cheryl A. Winkler, Svante Pääbo, Francisco Rothhammer, Marina Gubina, Pierre Zalloua, Aashish R. Jha, Swapan Mallick, Sergi Castellano, Qiaomei Fu, Desislava Nesheva, Sergey Litvinov, Ingrida Uktveryte, Michael Francken, Cosimo Posth, Theologos Loukidis, Cristian Capelli, Janet Kelso, Sarah A. Tishkoff, Toomas Kivisild, Mark G. Thomas, Elin Fornander, Mercedes Villena, Fredrik Hallgren, Vaidutis Kučinskas, Daniel Corach, George B.J. Busby, Judit Bene, William Klitz, Hamza A. Babiker, Karola Kirsanow, Ruth Bollongino, Rita Khusainova, Evan E. Eichler, Sardana A. Fedorova, Klemetti Näkkäläjärvi, Igor Rudan, Susanne Nordenfelt, Joshua G. Schraiber, Elena Balanovska, Antonio Salas, Richard Villems, Gabriel Bedoya, Elza Khusnutdinova, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mathematics, Lipson, Mark, Berger Leighton, Bonnie, Lazaridis,I, Patterson,P, Mittnik,A, Renaud,G, Mallick,S, Kirsanow,K, Sudmant,PH, Schraiber,JG, Castellano,S, Lipson,M, Berger,B, Economou,C, Bollongino,R, Fu,Q, Bos,KI, Nordenfelt,S, Li,H, De Filippo,C, Pruefer,K, Sawyer, Posth,C, Haak1,H, Hallgren,F, Fornander,E, Rohland,N, Delsate,D, Francken,M, Guinet,JM, Wah,J, Ayodo,G, Babiker,HA, Bailliet,G, Balanovska,E, Balanovsky,O, Barrantes,R, Bedoya,G, Ben-Ami,H, Bene,J, Berrada,F, Bravi,CM, Brisighelli,F, Busby,GBJ, Cali,F, Churnosov,M, Cole,DEC, Corach,D, Damba,L, van Driem,G, Dryomov,S, Dugoujon,JM, Fedorova,SA, Gallego Romero,I, Gubina,M, Hammer,M, Henn,BM, Hervig,T, Hodoglugi,U, Jha,AR, Karachanak-Yankova,S, Khusainova,R, Khusnutdinova,E, Kittles,R:Kivisild,T, Klitz,W, Kucˇinskas,V, Kushniarevich,A, Laredj,L, Litvinov,S, Loukidis,T, Mahley,RW, Melegh,B, Metspalu,E, Molina,J, Mountain,J, Na¨kka¨la¨ja¨rvi,K, Nesheva,D, Nyambo,T, Osipova,L, Parik,J, Platonov,F, Posukh,O, Romano,V, Rothhammer,F, Rudan,I, Ruizbakiev,R, Sahakyan,H, Sajantila,A, Salas,A, Starikovskaya,EB, Tarekegn,A, Toncheva,D, Turdikulova,S, Uktveryte,I, Utevska,O, Vasquez,R, Villena,M, Voevoda,M, Winkler,CA, Yepiskoposyan,L, Zalloua,P, Zemunik,T, Cooper, Capelli,C, Thomas,MG, Ruiz-inares,A, Tishkoff,SA, Singh,L, Thangaraj,K, Villems,R, Comas,D, Sukernik,R, Metspalu,M, Meyer,M, Eichler,EE, Burger,J, Slatkin,M, Pa¨a¨bo,S, Kelso,J, Reich,D, and Krause,J
- Subjects
History ,Neanderthal ,Biología ,Population Dynamics ,Present day ,Genoma humà ,Genome ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https] ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Settore BIO/13 - Biologia Applicata ,History, Ancient ,Genetics ,Principal Component Analysis ,education.field_of_study ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Ancient DNA ,030305 genetics & heredity ,food and beverages ,Agriculture ,Genomics ,3. Good health ,Europe ,Workforce ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Human ,Archaeogenetics ,Asia ,Lineage (genetic) ,EUROPE ,Otras Ciencias Biológicas ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Population ,Settore BIO/08 - ANTROPOLOGIA ,evolution ,Europeans ,Biology ,Article ,White People ,Ancient ,Genètica de poblacions humanes ,Human origins ,Ciencias Biológicas ,03 medical and health sciences ,HUMAN ORIGINS ,biology.animal ,Humans ,ANCIENT DNA ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1.6 [https] ,education ,Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Denisovan ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic diversity ,ancient DNA, modern DNA, Europeans, prehistory ,Genome, Human ,Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE) ,biology.organism_classification ,Evolutionary biology ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Upper Paleolithic ,Human genome ,GENOMICS - Abstract
We sequenced the genomes of a ∼7,000-year-old farmer from Germany and eight ∼8,000-year-old hunter-gatherers from Luxembourg and Sweden. We analysed these and other ancient genomes1,2,3,4 with 2,345 contemporary humans to show that most present-day Europeans derive from at least three highly differentiated populations: west European hunter-gatherers, who contributed ancestry to all Europeans but not to Near Easterners; ancient north Eurasians related to Upper Palaeolithic Siberians3, who contributed to both Europeans and Near Easterners; and early European farmers, who were mainly of Near Eastern origin but also harboured west European hunter-gatherer related ancestry. We model these populations’ deep relationships and show that early European farmers had ∼44% ancestry from a ‘basal Eurasian’ population that split before the diversification of other non-African lineages., Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Celular
- Published
- 2014
6. Building pangenome graphs.
- Author
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Garrison E, Guarracino A, Heumos S, Villani F, Bao Z, Tattini L, Hagmann J, Vorbrugg S, Marco-Sola S, Kubica C, Ashbrook DG, Thorell K, Rusholme-Pilcher RL, Liti G, Rudbeck E, Golicz AA, Nahnsen S, Yang Z, Mwaniki MN, Nobrega FL, Wu Y, Chen H, de Ligt J, Sudmant PH, Huang S, Weigel D, Soranzo N, Colonna V, Williams RW, and Prins P
- Subjects
- Genomics methods, Genome genetics, Humans, Algorithms, Computational Biology methods, Phylogeny, Software
- Abstract
Pangenome graphs can represent all variation between multiple reference genomes, but current approaches to build them exclude complex sequences or are based upon a single reference. In response, we developed the PanGenome Graph Builder, a pipeline for constructing pangenome graphs without bias or exclusion. The PanGenome Graph Builder uses all-to-all alignments to build a variation graph in which we can identify variation, measure conservation, detect recombination events and infer phylogenetic relationships., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Extensive longevity and DNA virus-driven adaptation in nearctic Myotis bats.
- Author
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Vazquez JM, Lauterbur ME, Mottaghinia S, Bucci M, Fraser D, Gray-Sandoval G, Gaucherand L, Haidar ZR, Han M, Kohler W, Lama TM, Le Corf A, Maesen S, McMillan D, Li S, Lo J, Rey C, Capel SL, Singer M, Slocum K, Thomas W, Tyburec JD, Villa S, Miller R, Buchalski M, Vazquez-Medina JP, Pfeffer S, Etienne L, Enard D, and Sudmant PH
- Abstract
The rich species diversity of bats encompasses extraordinary adaptations, including extreme longevity and tolerance to infectious disease. While traditional approaches using genetic screens in model organisms have uncovered some fundamental processes underlying these traits, model organisms do not possess the variation required to understand the evolution of traits with complex genetic architectures. In contrast, the advent of genomics at tree-of-life scales enables us to study the genetic interactions underlying these processes by leveraging millions of years of evolutionary trial-and-error. Here, we use the rich species diversity of the genus Myotis - one of the longest-living clades of mammals - to study the evolution of longevity-associated traits and infectious disease using functional evolutionary genomics. We generated reference genome assemblies and cell lines for 8 closely-related (~11 MYA) species of Myotis rich in phenotypic and life history diversity. Using genome-wide screens of positive selection, analysis of structural variation and copy number variation, and functional experiments in primary cell lines, we identify new patterns of adaptation in longevity, cancer resistance, and viral interactions both within Myotis and across bats. We find that the rapid evolution of lifespan in Myotis has some of the most significant variations in cancer risk across mammals, and demonstrate a unique DNA damage response in the long-lived M. lucifugus using primary cell culture models. Furthermore, we find evidence of abundant adaptation in response to DNA viruses, but not RNA viruses, in Myotis and other bats. This is in contrast to these patterns of adaptation in humans, which might contribute to the importance of bats as a reservoir of zoonotic viruses. Together, our results demonstrate the utility of leveraging natural variation to understand the genomics of traits with implications for human health and suggest important pleiotropic relationships between infectious disease tolerance and cancer resistance., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Complete sequencing of ape genomes.
- Author
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Yoo D, Rhie A, Hebbar P, Antonacci F, Logsdon GA, Solar SJ, Antipov D, Pickett BD, Safonova Y, Montinaro F, Luo Y, Malukiewicz J, Storer JM, Lin J, Sequeira AN, Mangan RJ, Hickey G, Anez GM, Balachandran P, Bankevich A, Beck CR, Biddanda A, Borchers M, Bouffard GG, Brannan E, Brooks SY, Carbone L, Carrel L, Chan AP, Crawford J, Diekhans M, Engelbrecht E, Feschotte C, Formenti G, Garcia GH, de Gennaro L, Gilbert D, Green RE, Guarracino A, Gupta I, Haddad D, Han J, Harris RS, Hartley GA, Harvey WT, Hiller M, Hoekzema K, Houck ML, Jeong H, Kamali K, Kellis M, Kille B, Lee C, Lee Y, Lees W, Lewis AP, Li Q, Loftus M, Loh YHE, Loucks H, Ma J, Mao Y, Martinez JFI, Masterson P, McCoy RC, McGrath B, McKinney S, Meyer BS, Miga KH, Mohanty SK, Munson KM, Pal K, Pennell M, Pevzner PA, Porubsky D, Potapova T, Ringeling FR, Roha JL, Ryder OA, Sacco S, Saha S, Sasaki T, Schatz MC, Schork NJ, Shanks C, Smeds L, Son DR, Steiner C, Sweeten AP, Tassia MG, Thibaud-Nissen F, Torres-González E, Trivedi M, Wei W, Wertz J, Yang M, Zhang P, Zhang S, Zhang Y, Zhang Z, Zhao SA, Zhu Y, Jarvis ED, Gerton JL, Rivas-González I, Paten B, Szpiech ZA, Huber CD, Lenz TL, Konkel MK, Yi SV, Canzar S, Watson CT, Sudmant PH, Molloy E, Garrison E, Lowe CB, Ventura M, O'Neill RJ, Koren S, Makova KD, Phillippy AM, and Eichler EE
- Abstract
We present haplotype-resolved reference genomes and comparative analyses of six ape species, namely: chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, Bornean orangutan, Sumatran orangutan, and siamang. We achieve chromosome-level contiguity with unparalleled sequence accuracy (<1 error in 500,000 base pairs), completely sequencing 215 gapless chromosomes telomere-to-telomere. We resolve challenging regions, such as the major histocompatibility complex and immunoglobulin loci, providing more in-depth evolutionary insights. Comparative analyses, including human, allow us to investigate the evolution and diversity of regions previously uncharacterized or incompletely studied without bias from mapping to the human reference. This includes newly minted gene families within lineage-specific segmental duplications, centromeric DNA, acrocentric chromosomes, and subterminal heterochromatin. This resource should serve as a definitive baseline for all future evolutionary studies of humans and our closest living ape relatives., Competing Interests: COMPETING INTERESTS E.E.E. is a scientific advisory board (SAB) member of Variant Bio, Inc. C.T.W. is a co-founder/CSO of Clareo Biosciences, Inc. W.L. is a co-founder/CIO of Clareo Biosciences, Inc. The other authors declare no competing interests.
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- 2024
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9. Recurrent evolution and selection shape structural diversity at the amylase locus.
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Bolognini D, Halgren A, Lou RN, Raveane A, Rocha JL, Guarracino A, Soranzo N, Chin CS, Garrison E, and Sudmant PH
- Subjects
- Humans, Gene Duplication genetics, Genetic Loci genetics, History, Ancient, Mutation Rate, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Hunting statistics & numerical data, Gene Deletion, DNA, Ancient analysis, Agriculture history, Agriculture statistics & numerical data, Amylases genetics, Amylases chemistry, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Dosage genetics, Genome, Human genetics, Haplotypes genetics, Selection, Genetic
- Abstract
The adoption of agriculture triggered a rapid shift towards starch-rich diets in human populations
1 . Amylase genes facilitate starch digestion, and increased amylase copy number has been observed in some modern human populations with high-starch intake2 , although evidence of recent selection is lacking3,4 . Here, using 94 long-read haplotype-resolved assemblies and short-read data from approximately 5,600 contemporary and ancient humans, we resolve the diversity and evolutionary history of structural variation at the amylase locus. We find that amylase genes have higher copy numbers in agricultural populations than in fishing, hunting and pastoral populations. We identify 28 distinct amylase structural architectures and demonstrate that nearly identical structures have arisen recurrently on different haplotype backgrounds throughout recent human history. AMY1 and AMY2A genes each underwent multiple duplication/deletion events with mutation rates up to more than 10,000-fold the single-nucleotide polymorphism mutation rate, whereas AMY2B gene duplications share a single origin. Using a pangenome-based approach, we infer structural haplotypes across thousands of humans identifying extensively duplicated haplotypes at higher frequency in modern agricultural populations. Leveraging 533 ancient human genomes, we find that duplication-containing haplotypes (with more gene copies than the ancestral haplotype) have rapidly increased in frequency over the past 12,000 years in West Eurasians, suggestive of positive selection. Together, our study highlights the potential effects of the agricultural revolution on human genomes and the importance of structural variation in human adaptation., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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10. Structural variation in humans and our primate kin in the era of telomere-to-telomere genomes and pangenomics.
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L Rocha J, Lou RN, and Sudmant PH
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- Humans, Animals, Genome, Human, Genome genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Genomic Structural Variation genetics, Primates genetics, Telomere genetics, Genomics methods
- Abstract
Structural variants (SVs) account for the majority of base pair differences both within and between primate species. However, our understanding of inter- and intra-species SV has been historically hampered by the quality of draft primate genomes and the absence of genome resources for key taxa. Recently, advances in long-read sequencing and genome assembly have begun to radically reshape our understanding of SVs. Two landmark achievements include the publication of a human telomere-to-telomere (T2T) genome as well as the development of the first human pangenome reference. In this review, we first look back to the major works laying the foundation for these projects. We then examine the ways in which T2T genome assemblies and pangenomes are transforming our understanding of and approach to primate SV. Finally, we discuss what the future of primate SV research may look like in the era of T2T genomes and pangenomics., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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11. Cortical plasticity is associated with blood-brain barrier modulation.
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Swissa E, Monsonego U, Yang LT, Schori L, Kamintsky L, Mirloo S, Burger I, Uzzan S, Patel R, Sudmant PH, Prager O, Kaufer D, and Friedman A
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Humans, Male, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Somatosensory Cortex physiology, Capillary Permeability, Adult, Blood-Brain Barrier, Neuronal Plasticity physiology
- Abstract
Brain microvessels possess the unique properties of a blood-brain barrier (BBB), tightly regulating the passage of molecules from the blood to the brain neuropil and vice versa. In models of brain injury, BBB dysfunction and the associated leakage of serum albumin to the neuropil have been shown to induce pathological plasticity, neuronal hyper-excitability, and seizures. The effect of neuronal activity on BBB function and whether it plays a role in plasticity in the healthy brain remain unclear. Here we show that neuronal activity induces modulation of microvascular permeability in the healthy brain and that it has a role in local network reorganization. Combining simultaneous electrophysiological recording and vascular imaging with transcriptomic analysis in rats, and functional and BBB-mapping MRI in human subjects, we show that prolonged stimulation of the limb induces a focal increase in BBB permeability in the corresponding somatosensory cortex that is associated with long-term synaptic plasticity. We further show that the increased microvascular permeability depends on neuronal activity and involves caveolae-mediated transcytosis and transforming growth factor β signaling. Our results reveal a role of BBB modulation in cortical plasticity in the healthy brain, highlighting the importance of neurovascular interactions for sensory experience and learning., Competing Interests: ES, UM, LY, LS, LK, SM, IB, SU, RP, PS, OP, DK, AF No competing interests declared, (© 2023, Swissa et al.)
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- 2024
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12. loco-pipe: an automated pipeline for population genomics with low-coverage whole-genome sequencing.
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Zhou ZT, Owens GL, Larson WA, Lou RN, and Sudmant PH
- Abstract
Summary: We developed loco-pipe, a Snakemake pipeline that seamlessly streamlines a set of essential population genomic analyses for low-coverage whole genome sequencing (lcWGS) data. loco-pipe is highly automated, easily customizable, massively parallelized, and thus is a valuable tool for both new and experienced users of lcWGS., Availability and Implementation: loco-pipe is published under the GPLv3. It is freely available on GitHub (github.com/sudmantlab/loco-pipe) and archived on Zenodo (doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10425920)., Competing Interests: None declared., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2024
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13. Insights into non-crossover recombination from long-read sperm sequencing.
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Schweiger R, Lee S, Zhou C, Yang TP, Smith K, Li S, Sanghvi R, Neville M, Mitchell E, Nessa A, Wadge S, Small KS, Campbell PJ, Sudmant PH, Rahbari R, and Durbin R
- Abstract
Meiotic recombination is a fundamental process that generates genetic diversity by creating new combinations of existing alleles. Although human crossovers have been studied at the pedigree, population and single-cell level, the more frequent non-crossover events that lead to gene conversion are harder to study, particularly at the individual level. Here we show that single high-fidelity long sequencing reads from sperm can capture both crossovers and non-crossovers, allowing effectively arbitrary sample sizes for analysis from one male. Using fifteen sperm samples from thirteen donors we demonstrate variation between and within donors for the rates of different types of recombination. Intriguingly, we observe a tendency for non-crossover gene conversions to occur upstream of nearby PRDM9 binding sites, whereas crossover locations have a slight downstream bias. We further provide evidence for two distinct non-crossover processes. One gives rise to the vast majority of non-crossovers with mean conversion tract length under 50bp, which we suggest is an outcome of standard PRDM9-induced meiotic recombination. In contrast ~2% of non-crossovers have much longer mean tract length, and potentially originate from the same process as complex events with more than two haplotype switches, which is not associated with PRDM9 binding sites and is also seen in somatic cells., Competing Interests: Competing interests S.Lee is a shareholder and an employee at Pacific Biosciences. P.J.C. is a co-founder, shareholder, and consultant for Quotient Therapeutics. R.S is a consultant to MyHeritage Ltd.
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- 2024
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14. Global diversity, recurrent evolution, and recent selection on amylase structural haplotypes in humans.
- Author
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Bolognini D, Halgren A, Lou RN, Raveane A, Rocha JL, Guarracino A, Soranzo N, Chin J, Garrison E, and Sudmant PH
- Abstract
The adoption of agriculture, first documented ~12,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent, triggered a rapid shift toward starch-rich diets in human populations. Amylase genes facilitate starch digestion and increased salivary amylase copy number has been observed in some modern human populations with high starch intake, though evidence of recent selection is lacking. Here, using 52 long-read diploid assemblies and short read data from ~5,600 contemporary and ancient humans, we resolve the diversity, evolutionary history, and selective impact of structural variation at the amylase locus. We find that amylase genes have higher copy numbers in populations with agricultural subsistence compared to fishing, hunting, and pastoral groups. We identify 28 distinct amylase structural architectures and demonstrate that nearly identical structures have arisen recurrently on different haplotype backgrounds throughout recent human history. AMY1 and AMY2A genes each exhibit multiple duplications/deletions with mutation rates >10,000-fold the SNP mutation rate, whereas AMY2B gene duplications share a single origin. Using a pangenome graph-based approach to infer structural haplotypes across thousands of humans, we identify extensively duplicated haplotypes present at higher frequencies in modern day populations with traditionally agricultural diets. Leveraging 533 ancient human genomes we find that duplication-containing haplotypes (i.e. haplotypes with more amylase gene copies than the ancestral haplotype) have increased in frequency more than seven-fold over the last 12,000 years providing evidence for recent selection in West Eurasians. Together, our study highlights the potential impacts of the agricultural revolution on human genomes and the importance of long-read sequencing in identifying signatures of selection at structurally complex loci.
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- 2024
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15. The complete sequence and comparative analysis of ape sex chromosomes.
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Makova KD, Pickett BD, Harris RS, Hartley GA, Cechova M, Pal K, Nurk S, Yoo D, Li Q, Hebbar P, McGrath BC, Antonacci F, Aubel M, Biddanda A, Borchers M, Bornberg-Bauer E, Bouffard GG, Brooks SY, Carbone L, Carrel L, Carroll A, Chang PC, Chin CS, Cook DE, Craig SJC, de Gennaro L, Diekhans M, Dutra A, Garcia GH, Grady PGS, Green RE, Haddad D, Hallast P, Harvey WT, Hickey G, Hillis DA, Hoyt SJ, Jeong H, Kamali K, Pond SLK, LaPolice TM, Lee C, Lewis AP, Loh YE, Masterson P, McGarvey KM, McCoy RC, Medvedev P, Miga KH, Munson KM, Pak E, Paten B, Pinto BJ, Potapova T, Rhie A, Rocha JL, Ryabov F, Ryder OA, Sacco S, Shafin K, Shepelev VA, Slon V, Solar SJ, Storer JM, Sudmant PH, Sweetalana, Sweeten A, Tassia MG, Thibaud-Nissen F, Ventura M, Wilson MA, Young AC, Zeng H, Zhang X, Szpiech ZA, Huber CD, Gerton JL, Yi SV, Schatz MC, Alexandrov IA, Koren S, O'Neill RJ, Eichler EE, and Phillippy AM
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Gorilla gorilla genetics, Hylobatidae genetics, Pan paniscus genetics, Pan troglodytes genetics, Phylogeny, Pongo abelii genetics, Pongo pygmaeus genetics, Telomere genetics, Evolution, Molecular, DNA Copy Number Variations genetics, Humans, Endangered Species, Reference Standards, Hominidae genetics, Hominidae classification, X Chromosome genetics, Y Chromosome genetics
- Abstract
Apes possess two sex chromosomes-the male-specific Y chromosome and the X chromosome, which is present in both males and females. The Y chromosome is crucial for male reproduction, with deletions being linked to infertility
1 . The X chromosome is vital for reproduction and cognition2 . Variation in mating patterns and brain function among apes suggests corresponding differences in their sex chromosomes. However, owing to their repetitive nature and incomplete reference assemblies, ape sex chromosomes have been challenging to study. Here, using the methodology developed for the telomere-to-telomere (T2T) human genome, we produced gapless assemblies of the X and Y chromosomes for five great apes (bonobo (Pan paniscus), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla), Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) and Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii)) and a lesser ape (the siamang gibbon (Symphalangus syndactylus)), and untangled the intricacies of their evolution. Compared with the X chromosomes, the ape Y chromosomes vary greatly in size and have low alignability and high levels of structural rearrangements-owing to the accumulation of lineage-specific ampliconic regions, palindromes, transposable elements and satellites. Many Y chromosome genes expand in multi-copy families and some evolve under purifying selection. Thus, the Y chromosome exhibits dynamic evolution, whereas the X chromosome is more stable. Mapping short-read sequencing data to these assemblies revealed diversity and selection patterns on sex chromosomes of more than 100 individual great apes. These reference assemblies are expected to inform human evolution and conservation genetics of non-human apes, all of which are endangered species., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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16. Mitochondrial haplotype and mito-nuclear matching drive somatic mutation and selection throughout ageing.
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Serrano IM, Hirose M, Valentine CC, Roesner S, Schmidt E, Pratt G, Williams L, Salk J, Ibrahim S, and Sudmant PH
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Cell Nucleus genetics, Female, Mitochondria genetics, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Male, Haplotypes, Aging genetics, Mutation, Selection, Genetic, Genome, Mitochondrial
- Abstract
Mitochondrial genomes co-evolve with the nuclear genome over evolutionary timescales and are shaped by selection in the female germline. Here we investigate how mismatching between nuclear and mitochondrial ancestry impacts the somatic evolution of the mitochondrial genome in different tissues throughout ageing. We used ultrasensitive duplex sequencing to profile ~2.5 million mitochondrial genomes across five mitochondrial haplotypes and three tissues in young and aged mice, cataloguing ~1.2 million mitochondrial somatic and ultralow-frequency inherited mutations, of which 81,097 are unique. We identify haplotype-specific mutational patterns and several mutational hotspots, including at the light strand origin of replication, which consistently exhibits the highest mutation frequency. We show that rodents exhibit a distinct mitochondrial somatic mutational spectrum compared with primates with a surfeit of reactive oxygen species-associated G > T/C > A mutations, and that somatic mutations in protein-coding genes exhibit signatures of negative selection. Lastly, we identify an extensive enrichment in somatic reversion mutations that 're-align' mito-nuclear ancestry within an organism's lifespan. Together, our findings demonstrate that mitochondrial genomes are a dynamically evolving subcellular population shaped by somatic mutation and selection throughout organismal lifetimes., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Hypoxia exposure blunts angiogenic signaling and upregulates the antioxidant system in endothelial cells derived from elephant seals.
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Allen KN, Torres-Velarde JM, Vazquez JM, Moreno-Santillán DD, Sudmant PH, and Vázquez-Medina JP
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Hypoxia metabolism, Cell Hypoxia, Neovascularization, Physiologic drug effects, Neovascularization, Physiologic physiology, Cells, Cultured, Glutathione metabolism, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit metabolism, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit genetics, Seals, Earless physiology, Seals, Earless metabolism, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Endothelial Cells drug effects, Antioxidants metabolism, Up-Regulation, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
Background: Elephant seals exhibit extreme hypoxemic tolerance derived from repetitive hypoxia/reoxygenation episodes they experience during diving bouts. Real-time assessment of the molecular changes underlying protection against hypoxic injury in seals remains restricted by their at-sea inaccessibility. Hence, we developed a proliferative arterial endothelial cell culture model from elephant seals and used RNA-seq, functional assays, and confocal microscopy to assess the molecular response to prolonged hypoxia., Results: Seal and human endothelial cells exposed to 1% O
2 for up to 6 h respond differently to acute and prolonged hypoxia. Seal cells decouple stabilization of the hypoxia-sensitive transcriptional regulator HIF-1α from angiogenic signaling. Rapid upregulation of genes involved in glutathione (GSH) metabolism supports the maintenance of GSH pools, and intracellular succinate increases in seal but not human cells. High maximal and spare respiratory capacity in seal cells after hypoxia exposure occurs in concert with increasing mitochondrial branch length and independent from major changes in extracellular acidification rate, suggesting that seal cells recover oxidative metabolism without significant glycolytic dependency after hypoxia exposure., Conclusions: We found that the glutathione antioxidant system is upregulated in seal endothelial cells during hypoxia, while this system remains static in comparable human cells. Furthermore, we found that in contrast to human cells, hypoxia exposure rapidly activates HIF-1 in seal cells, but this response is decoupled from the canonical angiogenesis pathway. These results highlight the unique mechanisms that confer extraordinary tolerance to limited oxygen availability in a champion diving mammal., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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18. Reference genome of Townsend's big-eared bat, Corynorhinus townsendii.
- Author
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Capel SLR, Hamilton NM, Fraser D, Escalona M, Nguyen O, Sacco S, Sahasrabudhe R, Seligmann W, Vazquez JM, Sudmant PH, Morrison ML, Wayne RK, and Buchalski MR
- Subjects
- Animals, Genome, Genomics methods, North America, Chiroptera genetics
- Abstract
Townsend's big-eared bat, Corynorhinus townsendii, is a cave- and mine-roosting species found largely in western North America. Considered a species of conservation concern throughout much of its range, protection efforts would greatly benefit from understanding patterns of population structure, genetic diversity, and local adaptation. To facilitate such research, we present the first de novo genome assembly of C. townsendii as part of the California Conservation Genomics Project (CCGP). Pacific Biosciences HiFi long reads and Omni-C chromatin-proximity sequencing technologies were used to produce a de novo genome assembly, consistent with the standard CCGP reference genome protocol. This assembly comprises 391 scaffolds spanning 2.1 Gb, represented by a scaffold N50 of 174.6 Mb, a contig N50 of 23.4 Mb, and a benchmarking universal single-copy ortholog (BUSCO) completeness score of 96.6%. This high-quality genome will be a key tool for informed conservation and management of this vulnerable species in California and across its range., (© The American Genetic Association. 2023.)
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- 2024
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19. A genome assembly of the Yuma myotis bat, Myotis yumanensis.
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Curti JN, Fraser D, Escalona M, Fairbairn CW, Sacco S, Sahasrabudhe R, Nguyen O, Seligmann W, Sudmant PH, Toffelmier E, Vazquez JM, Wayne R, Shaffer HB, and Buchalski MR
- Subjects
- Animals, North America, Genome, Genomics, Biological Evolution, Chiroptera genetics
- Abstract
The Yuma myotis bat (Myotis yumanensis) is a small vespertilionid bat and one of 52 species of new world Myotis bats in the subgenus Pizonyx. While M. yumanensis populations currently appear relatively stable, it is one of 12 bat species known or suspected to be susceptible to white-nose syndrome, the fungal disease causing declines in bat populations across North America. Only two of these 12 species have genome resources available, which limits the ability of resource managers to use genomic techniques to track the responses of bat populations to white-nose syndrome generally. Here we present the first de novo genome assembly for Yuma myotis, generated as a part of the California Conservation Genomics Project. The M. yumanensis genome was generated using a combination of PacBio HiFi long reads and Omni-C chromatin-proximity sequencing technology. This high-quality genome is one of the most complete bat assemblies available, with a contig N50 of 28.03 Mb, scaffold N50 of 99.14 Mb, and BUSCO completeness score of 93.7%. The Yuma myotis genome provides a high-quality resource that will aid in comparative genomic and evolutionary studies, as well as inform conservation management related to white-nose syndrome., (© The American Genetic Association. 2023.)
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- 2024
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20. Publisher Correction: Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia.
- Author
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Allentoft ME, Sikora M, Refoyo-Martínez A, Irving-Pease EK, Fischer A, Barrie W, Ingason A, Stenderup J, Sjögren KG, Pearson A, Sousa da Mota B, Schulz Paulsson B, Halgren A, Macleod R, Jørkov MLS, Demeter F, Sørensen L, Nielsen PO, Henriksen RA, Vimala T, McColl H, Margaryan A, Ilardo M, Vaughn A, Fischer Mortensen M, Nielsen AB, Ulfeldt Hede M, Johannsen NN, Rasmussen P, Vinner L, Renaud G, Stern A, Jensen TZT, Scorrano G, Schroeder H, Lysdahl P, Ramsøe AD, Skorobogatov A, Schork AJ, Rosengren A, Ruter A, Outram A, Timoshenko AA, Buzhilova A, Coppa A, Zubova A, Silva AM, Hansen AJ, Gromov A, Logvin A, Gotfredsen AB, Henning Nielsen B, González-Rabanal B, Lalueza-Fox C, McKenzie CJ, Gaunitz C, Blasco C, Liesau C, Martinez-Labarga C, Pozdnyakov DV, Cuenca-Solana D, Lordkipanidze DO, En'shin D, Salazar-García DC, Price TD, Borić D, Kostyleva E, Veselovskaya EV, Usmanova ER, Cappellini E, Brinch Petersen E, Kannegaard E, Radina F, Eylem Yediay F, Duday H, Gutiérrez-Zugasti I, Merts I, Potekhina I, Shevnina I, Altinkaya I, Guilaine J, Hansen J, Aura Tortosa JE, Zilhão J, Vega J, Buck Pedersen K, Tunia K, Zhao L, Mylnikova LN, Larsson L, Metz L, Yepiskoposyan L, Pedersen L, Sarti L, Orlando L, Slimak L, Klassen L, Blank M, González-Morales M, Silvestrini M, Vretemark M, Nesterova MS, Rykun M, Rolfo MF, Szmyt M, Przybyła M, Calattini M, Sablin M, Dobisíková M, Meldgaard M, Johansen M, Berezina N, Card N, Saveliev NA, Poshekhonova O, Rickards O, Lozovskaya OV, Gábor O, Uldum OC, Aurino P, Kosintsev P, Courtaud P, Ríos P, Mortensen P, Lotz P, Persson P, Bangsgaard P, de Barros Damgaard P, Vang Petersen P, Martinez PP, Włodarczak P, Smolyaninov RV, Maring R, Menduiña R, Badalyan R, Iversen R, Turin R, Vasilyev S, Wåhlin S, Borutskaya S, Skochina S, Sørensen SA, Andersen SH, Jørgensen T, Serikov YB, Molodin VI, Smrcka V, Merts V, Appadurai V, Moiseyev V, Magnusson Y, Kjær KH, Lynnerup N, Lawson DJ, Sudmant PH, Rasmussen S, Korneliussen TS, Durbin R, Nielsen R, Delaneau O, Werge T, Racimo F, Kristiansen K, and Willerslev E
- Published
- 2024
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21. The selection landscape and genetic legacy of ancient Eurasians.
- Author
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Irving-Pease EK, Refoyo-Martínez A, Barrie W, Ingason A, Pearson A, Fischer A, Sjögren KG, Halgren AS, Macleod R, Demeter F, Henriksen RA, Vimala T, McColl H, Vaughn AH, Speidel L, Stern AJ, Scorrano G, Ramsøe A, Schork AJ, Rosengren A, Zhao L, Kristiansen K, Iversen AKN, Fugger L, Sudmant PH, Lawson DJ, Durbin R, Korneliussen T, Werge T, Allentoft ME, Sikora M, Nielsen R, Racimo F, and Willerslev E
- Subjects
- Humans, Affect, Agriculture history, Alleles, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Asia ethnology, Diabetes Mellitus genetics, Europe ethnology, Farmers history, Genetic Loci genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, History, Ancient, Human Migration, Hunting history, Multigene Family genetics, Phenotype, UK Biobank, Multifactorial Inheritance genetics, Asian genetics, European People genetics, Genome, Human genetics, Selection, Genetic
- Abstract
The Holocene (beginning around 12,000 years ago) encompassed some of the most significant changes in human evolution, with far-reaching consequences for the dietary, physical and mental health of present-day populations. Using a dataset of more than 1,600 imputed ancient genomes
1 , we modelled the selection landscape during the transition from hunting and gathering, to farming and pastoralism across West Eurasia. We identify key selection signals related to metabolism, including that selection at the FADS cluster began earlier than previously reported and that selection near the LCT locus predates the emergence of the lactase persistence allele by thousands of years. We also find strong selection in the HLA region, possibly due to increased exposure to pathogens during the Bronze Age. Using ancient individuals to infer local ancestry tracts in over 400,000 samples from the UK Biobank, we identify widespread differences in the distribution of Mesolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age ancestries across Eurasia. By calculating ancestry-specific polygenic risk scores, we show that height differences between Northern and Southern Europe are associated with differential Steppe ancestry, rather than selection, and that risk alleles for mood-related phenotypes are enriched for Neolithic farmer ancestry, whereas risk alleles for diabetes and Alzheimer's disease are enriched for Western hunter-gatherer ancestry. Our results indicate that ancient selection and migration were large contributors to the distribution of phenotypic diversity in present-day Europeans., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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22. Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia.
- Author
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Allentoft ME, Sikora M, Refoyo-Martínez A, Irving-Pease EK, Fischer A, Barrie W, Ingason A, Stenderup J, Sjögren KG, Pearson A, Sousa da Mota B, Schulz Paulsson B, Halgren A, Macleod R, Jørkov MLS, Demeter F, Sørensen L, Nielsen PO, Henriksen RA, Vimala T, McColl H, Margaryan A, Ilardo M, Vaughn A, Fischer Mortensen M, Nielsen AB, Ulfeldt Hede M, Johannsen NN, Rasmussen P, Vinner L, Renaud G, Stern A, Jensen TZT, Scorrano G, Schroeder H, Lysdahl P, Ramsøe AD, Skorobogatov A, Schork AJ, Rosengren A, Ruter A, Outram A, Timoshenko AA, Buzhilova A, Coppa A, Zubova A, Silva AM, Hansen AJ, Gromov A, Logvin A, Gotfredsen AB, Henning Nielsen B, González-Rabanal B, Lalueza-Fox C, McKenzie CJ, Gaunitz C, Blasco C, Liesau C, Martinez-Labarga C, Pozdnyakov DV, Cuenca-Solana D, Lordkipanidze DO, En'shin D, Salazar-García DC, Price TD, Borić D, Kostyleva E, Veselovskaya EV, Usmanova ER, Cappellini E, Brinch Petersen E, Kannegaard E, Radina F, Eylem Yediay F, Duday H, Gutiérrez-Zugasti I, Merts I, Potekhina I, Shevnina I, Altinkaya I, Guilaine J, Hansen J, Aura Tortosa JE, Zilhão J, Vega J, Buck Pedersen K, Tunia K, Zhao L, Mylnikova LN, Larsson L, Metz L, Yepiskoposyan L, Pedersen L, Sarti L, Orlando L, Slimak L, Klassen L, Blank M, González-Morales M, Silvestrini M, Vretemark M, Nesterova MS, Rykun M, Rolfo MF, Szmyt M, Przybyła M, Calattini M, Sablin M, Dobisíková M, Meldgaard M, Johansen M, Berezina N, Card N, Saveliev NA, Poshekhonova O, Rickards O, Lozovskaya OV, Gábor O, Uldum OC, Aurino P, Kosintsev P, Courtaud P, Ríos P, Mortensen P, Lotz P, Persson P, Bangsgaard P, de Barros Damgaard P, Vang Petersen P, Martinez PP, Włodarczak P, Smolyaninov RV, Maring R, Menduiña R, Badalyan R, Iversen R, Turin R, Vasilyev S, Wåhlin S, Borutskaya S, Skochina S, Sørensen SA, Andersen SH, Jørgensen T, Serikov YB, Molodin VI, Smrcka V, Merts V, Appadurai V, Moiseyev V, Magnusson Y, Kjær KH, Lynnerup N, Lawson DJ, Sudmant PH, Rasmussen S, Korneliussen TS, Durbin R, Nielsen R, Delaneau O, Werge T, Racimo F, Kristiansen K, and Willerslev E
- Subjects
- Humans, Agriculture history, Asia, Western, Black Sea, Diploidy, Europe ethnology, Genotype, History, Ancient, Hunting history, Ice Cover, Genetics, Population, Genome, Human, Human Migration history, Metagenomics
- Abstract
Western Eurasia witnessed several large-scale human migrations during the Holocene
1-5 . Here, to investigate the cross-continental effects of these migrations, we shotgun-sequenced 317 genomes-mainly from the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods-from across northern and western Eurasia. These were imputed alongside published data to obtain diploid genotypes from more than 1,600 ancient humans. Our analyses revealed a 'great divide' genomic boundary extending from the Black Sea to the Baltic. Mesolithic hunter-gatherers were highly genetically differentiated east and west of this zone, and the effect of the neolithization was equally disparate. Large-scale ancestry shifts occurred in the west as farming was introduced, including near-total replacement of hunter-gatherers in many areas, whereas no substantial ancestry shifts happened east of the zone during the same period. Similarly, relatedness decreased in the west from the Neolithic transition onwards, whereas, east of the Urals, relatedness remained high until around 4,000 BP, consistent with the persistence of localized groups of hunter-gatherers. The boundary dissolved when Yamnaya-related ancestry spread across western Eurasia around 5,000 BP, resulting in a second major turnover that reached most parts of Europe within a 1,000-year span. The genetic origin and fate of the Yamnaya have remained elusive, but we show that hunter-gatherers from the Middle Don region contributed ancestry to them. Yamnaya groups later admixed with individuals associated with the Globular Amphora culture before expanding into Europe. Similar turnovers occurred in western Siberia, where we report new genomic data from a 'Neolithic steppe' cline spanning the Siberian forest steppe to Lake Baikal. These prehistoric migrations had profound and lasting effects on the genetic diversity of Eurasian populations., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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23. The Complete Sequence and Comparative Analysis of Ape Sex Chromosomes.
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Makova KD, Pickett BD, Harris RS, Hartley GA, Cechova M, Pal K, Nurk S, Yoo D, Li Q, Hebbar P, McGrath BC, Antonacci F, Aubel M, Biddanda A, Borchers M, Bomberg E, Bouffard GG, Brooks SY, Carbone L, Carrel L, Carroll A, Chang PC, Chin CS, Cook DE, Craig SJC, de Gennaro L, Diekhans M, Dutra A, Garcia GH, Grady PGS, Green RE, Haddad D, Hallast P, Harvey WT, Hickey G, Hillis DA, Hoyt SJ, Jeong H, Kamali K, Kosakovsky Pond SL, LaPolice TM, Lee C, Lewis AP, Loh YE, Masterson P, McCoy RC, Medvedev P, Miga KH, Munson KM, Pak E, Paten B, Pinto BJ, Potapova T, Rhie A, Rocha JL, Ryabov F, Ryder OA, Sacco S, Shafin K, Shepelev VA, Slon V, Solar SJ, Storer JM, Sudmant PH, Sweetalana, Sweeten A, Tassia MG, Thibaud-Nissen F, Ventura M, Wilson MA, Young AC, Zeng H, Zhang X, Szpiech ZA, Huber CD, Gerton JL, Yi SV, Schatz MC, Alexandrov IA, Koren S, O'Neill RJ, Eichler E, and Phillippy AM
- Abstract
Apes possess two sex chromosomes-the male-specific Y and the X shared by males and females. The Y chromosome is crucial for male reproduction, with deletions linked to infertility. The X chromosome carries genes vital for reproduction and cognition. Variation in mating patterns and brain function among great apes suggests corresponding differences in their sex chromosome structure and evolution. However, due to their highly repetitive nature and incomplete reference assemblies, ape sex chromosomes have been challenging to study. Here, using the state-of-the-art experimental and computational methods developed for the telomere-to-telomere (T2T) human genome, we produced gapless, complete assemblies of the X and Y chromosomes for five great apes (chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, Bornean and Sumatran orangutans) and a lesser ape, the siamang gibbon. These assemblies completely resolved ampliconic, palindromic, and satellite sequences, including the entire centromeres, allowing us to untangle the intricacies of ape sex chromosome evolution. We found that, compared to the X, ape Y chromosomes vary greatly in size and have low alignability and high levels of structural rearrangements. This divergence on the Y arises from the accumulation of lineage-specific ampliconic regions and palindromes (which are shared more broadly among species on the X) and from the abundance of transposable elements and satellites (which have a lower representation on the X). Our analysis of Y chromosome genes revealed lineage-specific expansions of multi-copy gene families and signatures of purifying selection. In summary, the Y exhibits dynamic evolution, while the X is more stable. Finally, mapping short-read sequencing data from >100 great ape individuals revealed the patterns of diversity and selection on their sex chromosomes, demonstrating the utility of these reference assemblies for studies of great ape evolution. These complete sex chromosome assemblies are expected to further inform conservation genetics of nonhuman apes, all of which are endangered species., Competing Interests: Competing Interests EEE is a scientific advisory board (SAB) member of Variant Bio, Inc. RJO is a scientific advisory board (SAB) member of Colossal Biosciences, Inc. CL is a scientific advisory board (SAB) member of Nabsys, Inc. and Genome Insight, Inc.
- Published
- 2023
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24. The evolution of aging and lifespan.
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Li S, Vazquez JM, and Sudmant PH
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Selection, Genetic genetics, Biological Evolution, Genetic Variation, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Frequency, Mutation, Phenotype, Longevity genetics, Aging genetics
- Abstract
Aging is a nearly inescapable trait among organisms yet lifespan varies tremendously across different species and spans several orders of magnitude in vertebrates alone. This vast phenotypic diversity is driven by distinct evolutionary trajectories and tradeoffs that are reflected in patterns of diversification and constraint in organismal genomes. Age-specific impacts of selection also shape allele frequencies in populations, thus impacting disease susceptibility and environment-specific mortality risk. Further, the mutational processes that spawn this genetic diversity in both germline and somatic cells are strongly influenced by age and life history. We discuss recent advances in our understanding of the evolution of aging and lifespan at organismal, population, and cellular scales, and highlight outstanding questions that remain unanswered., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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25. Mitochondrial haplotype and mito-nuclear matching drive somatic mutation and selection throughout aging.
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Serrano IM, Hirose M, Valentine CC, Roesner S, Schmidt E, Pratt G, Williams L, Salk J, Ibrahim S, and Sudmant PH
- Abstract
Mitochondrial genomes co-evolve with the nuclear genome over evolutionary timescales and are shaped by selection in the female germline. Here, we investigate how mismatching between nuclear and mitochondrial ancestry impacts the somatic evolution of the mt-genome in different tissues throughout aging. We used ultra-sensitive Duplex Sequencing to profile ~2.5 million mt-genomes across five mitochondrial haplotypes and three tissues in young and aged mice, cataloging ~1.2 million mitochondrial somatic and ultra low frequency inherited mutations, of which 81,097 are unique. We identify haplotype-specific mutational patterns and several mutational hotspots, including at the Light Strand Origin of Replication, which consistently exhibits the highest mutation frequency. We show that rodents exhibit a distinct mitochondrial somatic mutational spectrum compared to primates with a surfeit of reactive oxygen species-associated G>T/C>A mutations, and that somatic mutations in protein coding genes exhibit signatures of negative selection. Lastly, we identify an extensive enrichment in somatic reversion mutations that "re-align" mito-nuclear ancestry within an organism's lifespan. Together, our findings demonstrate that mitochondrial genomes are a dynamically evolving subcellular population shaped by somatic mutation and selection throughout organismal lifetimes., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interests C.V., S. A., E.S., G.P., L.W., and J.S. declare they are equity holders of TwinStrand Biosciences, Inc. Additionally, C.V., E.S., and J.S. are current employees of TwinStrand Biosciences and C.V., E.S., L.W., and J.S. are inventors on one or more Duplex Sequencing-related patents.
- Published
- 2023
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26. Rapid turnover and evolution of sex-determining regions in Sebastes rockfishes.
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Sykes NTB, Kolora SRR, Sudmant PH, and Owens GL
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Sex Chromosomes genetics, Y Chromosome, Genomics methods, Evolution, Molecular, Perciformes genetics, Bass genetics
- Abstract
Nature has evolved a wealth of sex determination (SD) mechanisms, driven by both genetic and environmental factors. Recent studies of SD in fishes have shown that not all taxa fit the classic paradigm of sex chromosome evolution and diverse SD methods can be found even among closely related species. Here, we apply a suite of genomic approaches to investigate sex-biased genomic variation in eight species of Sebastes rockfish found in the northeast Pacific Ocean. Using recently assembled chromosome-level rockfish genomes, we leverage published sequence data to identify disparate sex chromosomes and sex-biased loci in five species. We identify two putative male sex chromosomes in S. diaconus, a single putative sex chromosome in the sibling species S. carnatus and S. chrysomelas, and an unplaced sex determining contig in the sibling species S. miniatus and S. crocotulus. Our study provides evidence for disparate means of sex determination within a recently diverged set of species and sheds light on the diverse origins of sex determination mechanisms present in the animal kingdom., (© 2023 The Authors. Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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27. Multiscale analysis of pangenomes enables improved representation of genomic diversity for repetitive and clinically relevant genes.
- Author
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Chin CS, Behera S, Khalak A, Sedlazeck FJ, Sudmant PH, Wagner J, and Zook JM
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Major Histocompatibility Complex, Genomics, Genome, Human
- Abstract
Advancements in sequencing technologies and assembly methods enable the regular production of high-quality genome assemblies characterizing complex regions. However, challenges remain in efficiently interpreting variation at various scales, from smaller tandem repeats to megabase rearrangements, across many human genomes. We present a PanGenome Research Tool Kit (PGR-TK) enabling analyses of complex pangenome structural and haplotype variation at multiple scales. We apply the graph decomposition methods in PGR-TK to the class II major histocompatibility complex demonstrating the importance of the human pangenome for analyzing complicated regions. Moreover, we investigate the Y-chromosome genes, DAZ1/DAZ2/DAZ3/DAZ4, of which structural variants have been linked to male infertility, and X-chromosome genes OPN1LW and OPN1MW linked to eye disorders. We further showcase PGR-TK across 395 complex repetitive medically important genes. This highlights the power of PGR-TK to resolve complex variation in regions of the genome that were previously too complex to analyze., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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28. North African fox genomes show signatures of repeated introgression and adaptation to life in deserts.
- Author
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L Rocha J, Silva P, Santos N, Nakamura M, Afonso S, Qninba A, Boratynski Z, Sudmant PH, Brito JC, Nielsen R, and Godinho R
- Subjects
- Animals, Africa, Northern, Desert Climate, Genomics, Water, Homeostasis genetics, Homeostasis physiology, Adaptation, Biological genetics, Biological Evolution, Foxes genetics
- Abstract
Elucidating the evolutionary process of animal adaptation to deserts is key to understanding adaptive responses to climate change. Here we generated 82 individual whole genomes of four fox species (genus Vulpes) inhabiting the Sahara Desert at different evolutionary times. We show that adaptation of new colonizing species to a hot arid environment has probably been facilitated by introgression and trans-species polymorphisms shared with older desert resident species, including a putatively adaptive 25 Mb genomic region. Scans for signatures of selection implicated genes affecting temperature perception, non-renal water loss and heat production in the recent adaptation of North African red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), after divergence from Eurasian populations approximately 78 thousand years ago. In the extreme desert specialists, Rueppell's fox (V. rueppellii) and fennec (V. zerda), we identified repeated signatures of selection in genes affecting renal water homeostasis supported by gene expression and physiological differences. Our study provides insights into the mechanisms and genetic underpinnings of a natural experiment of repeated adaptation to extreme conditions., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2023
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29. Hypoxia blunts angiogenic signaling and upregulates the antioxidant system in elephant seal endothelial cells.
- Author
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Allen KN, Torres-Velarde JM, Vazquez JM, Moreno-Santillan DD, Sudmant PH, and Vázquez-Medina JP
- Abstract
Elephant seals experience extreme hypoxemia during diving bouts. Similar depletions in oxygen availability characterize pathologies including myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke in humans, but seals manage these repeated episodes without injury. However, the real-time assessment of the molecular changes underlying protection against hypoxic injury in seals remains restricted by their at-sea inaccessibility. Hence, we developed a proliferative arterial endothelial cell culture system to assess the molecular response to prolonged hypoxia. Seal and human cells exposed to 1% O
2 for up to 6 h demonstrated differential responses to both acute and prolonged hypoxia. Seal cells decouple stabilization of the hypoxia-sensitive transcriptional regulator HIF-1α from angiogenic signaling at both the transcriptional and cellular level. Rapid upregulation of genes involved in the glutathione (GSH) metabolism pathway supported maintenance of GSH pools and increases in intracellular succinate in seal but not human cells during hypoxia exposure. High maximal and spare respiratory capacity in seal cells after hypoxia exposure occurred in concert with increasing mitochondrial branch length and independent from major changes in extracellular acidification rate, suggesting seal cells recover oxidative metabolism without significant glycolytic dependency after hypoxia exposure. In sum, our studies show that in contrast to human cells, seal cells adapt to hypoxia exposure by dampening angiogenic signaling, increasing antioxidant protection, and maintaining mitochondrial morphological integrity and function.- Published
- 2023
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30. The mitochondrial unfolded protein response regulates hippocampal neural stem cell aging.
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Wang CL, Ohkubo R, Mu WC, Chen W, Fan JL, Song Z, Maruichi A, Sudmant PH, Pisco AO, Dubal DB, Ji N, and Chen D
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Neurogenesis physiology, Aging physiology, Unfolded Protein Response, Cell Proliferation, Hippocampus, Neural Stem Cells metabolism
- Abstract
Aging results in a decline in neural stem cells (NSCs), neurogenesis, and cognitive function, and evidence is emerging to demonstrate disrupted adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus of patients with several neurodegenerative disorders. Here, single-cell RNA sequencing of the dentate gyrus of young and old mice shows that the mitochondrial protein folding stress is prominent in activated NSCs/neural progenitors (NPCs) among the neurogenic niche, and it increases with aging accompanying dysregulated cell cycle and mitochondrial activity in activated NSCs/NPCs in the dentate gyrus. Increasing mitochondrial protein folding stress results in compromised NSC maintenance and reduced neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus, neural hyperactivity, and impaired cognitive function. Reducing mitochondrial protein folding stress in the dentate gyrus of old mice improves neurogenesis and cognitive function. These results establish the mitochondrial protein folding stress as a driver of NSC aging and suggest approaches to improve aging-associated cognitive decline., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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31. Highly-multiplexed and efficient long-amplicon PacBio and Nanopore sequencing of hundreds of full mitochondrial genomes.
- Author
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Karin BR, Arellano S, Wang L, Walzer K, Pomerantz A, Vasquez JM, Chatla K, Sudmant PH, Bach BH, Smith LL, and McGuire JA
- Subjects
- Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Biodiversity, Genome, Mitochondrial, Nanopore Sequencing, Nanopores
- Abstract
Background: Mitochondrial genome sequences have become critical to the study of biodiversity. Genome skimming and other short-read based methods are the most common approaches, but they are not well-suited to scale up to multiplexing hundreds of samples. Here, we report on a new approach to sequence hundreds to thousands of complete mitochondrial genomes in parallel using long-amplicon sequencing. We amplified the mitochondrial genome of 677 specimens in two partially overlapping amplicons and implemented an asymmetric PCR-based indexing approach to multiplex 1,159 long amplicons together on a single PacBio SMRT Sequel II cell. We also tested this method on Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) MinION R9.4 to assess if this method could be applied to other long-read technologies. We implemented several optimizations that make this method significantly more efficient than alternative mitochondrial genome sequencing methods., Results: With the PacBio sequencing data we recovered at least one of the two fragments for 96% of samples (~ 80-90%) with mean coverage ~ 1,500x. The ONT data recovered less than 50% of input fragments likely due to low throughput and the design of the Barcoded Universal Primers which were optimized for PacBio sequencing. We compared a single mitochondrial gene alignment to half and full mitochondrial genomes and found, as expected, increased tree support with longer alignments, though whole mitochondrial genomes were not significantly better than half mitochondrial genomes., Conclusions: This method can effectively capture thousands of long amplicons in a single run and be used to build more robust phylogenies quickly and effectively. We provide several recommendations for future users depending on the evolutionary scale of their system. A natural extension of this method is to collect multi-locus datasets consisting of mitochondrial genomes and several long nuclear loci at once., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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32. The hepatic integrated stress response suppresses the somatotroph axis to control liver damage in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
- Author
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Ohkubo R, Mu WC, Wang CL, Song Z, Barthez M, Wang Y, Mitchener N, Abdullayev R, Lee YR, Ma Y, Curtin M, Srinivasan S, Zhang X, Yang F, Sudmant PH, Pisco AO, Neff N, Haynes CM, and Chen D
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Liver pathology, Hepatocytes pathology, Liver Cirrhosis pathology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease pathology, Somatotrophs
- Abstract
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can be ameliorated by calorie restriction, which leads to the suppressed somatotroph axis. Paradoxically, the suppressed somatotroph axis is associated with patients with NAFLD and is correlated with the severity of fibrosis. How the somatotroph axis becomes dysregulated and whether the repressed somatotroph axis impacts liver damage during the progression of NAFLD are unclear. Here, we identify a regulatory branch of the hepatic integrated stress response (ISR), which represses the somatotroph axis in hepatocytes through ATF3, resulting in enhanced cell survival and reduced cell proliferation. In mouse models of NAFLD, the ISR represses the somatotroph axis, leading to reduced apoptosis and inflammation but decreased hepatocyte proliferation and exacerbated fibrosis in the liver. NAD
+ repletion reduces the ISR, rescues the dysregulated somatotroph axis, and alleviates NAFLD. These results establish that the hepatic ISR suppresses the somatotroph axis to control cell fate decisions and liver damage in NAFLD., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
33. Tissue-specific impacts of aging and genetics on gene expression patterns in humans.
- Author
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Yamamoto R, Chung R, Vazquez JM, Sheng H, Steinberg PL, Ioannidis NM, and Sudmant PH
- Subjects
- Gene Expression, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, Phenotype, Aging genetics, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics
- Abstract
Age is the primary risk factor for many common human diseases. Here, we quantify the relative contributions of genetics and aging to gene expression patterns across 27 tissues from 948 humans. We show that the predictive power of expression quantitative trait loci is impacted by age in many tissues. Jointly modelling the contributions of age and genetics to transcript level variation we find expression heritability (h
2 ) is consistent among tissues while the contribution of aging varies by >20-fold with [Formula: see text] in 5 tissues. We find that while the force of purifying selection is stronger on genes expressed early versus late in life (Medawar's hypothesis), several highly proliferative tissues exhibit the opposite pattern. These non-Medawarian tissues exhibit high rates of cancer and age-of-expression-associated somatic mutations. In contrast, genes under genetic control are under relaxed constraint. Together, we demonstrate the distinct roles of aging and genetics on expression phenotypes., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
34. Population Genomics of Variegated Toad-Headed Lizard Phrynocephalus versicolor and Its Adaptation to the Colorful Sand of the Gobi Desert.
- Author
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Jin Y, Aguilar-Gómez D, Y C Brandt D, Square TA, Li J, Liu Z, Wang T, Sudmant PH, Miller CT, and Nielsen R
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Metagenomics, RNA, Transfer genetics, Sand, Genome, Mitochondrial, Lizards genetics
- Abstract
The variegated toad-headed agama, Phrynocephalus versicolor, lives in the arid landscape of the Chinese Gobi Desert. We analyzed populations from three different locations which vary in substrate color and altitude: Heishankou (HSK), Guazhou County (GZ), and Ejin Banner (EJN). The substrate color is either light-yellow (GZ-y), yellow (EJN-y), or black (HSK-b); the corresponding lizard population colors largely match their substrate in the degree of melanism. We assembled the P. versicolor genome and sequenced over 90 individuals from the three different populations. Genetic divergence between populations corresponds to their geographic distribution. We inferred the genetic relationships among these populations and used selection scans and differential expression to identify genes that show signatures of selection. Slc2a11 and akap12, among other genes, are highly differentiated and may be responsible for pigment adaptation to substrate color in P. versicolor., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2022
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35. Meiotic cDNA libraries reveal gene truncations and mitochondrial proteins important for competitive fitness in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
- Author
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Sing TL, Conlon K, Lu SH, Madrazo N, Morse K, Barker JC, Hollerer I, Brar GA, Sudmant PH, and Ünal E
- Subjects
- DNA, Complementary, Gene Library, Meiosis genetics, Mitochondrial Proteins genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Gametogenesis is an evolutionarily conserved developmental program whereby a diploid progenitor cell undergoes meiosis and cellular remodeling to differentiate into haploid gametes, the precursors for sexual reproduction. Even in the simple eukaryotic organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the meiotic transcriptome is very rich and complex, thereby necessitating new tools for functional studies. Here, we report the construction of 5 stage-specific, inducible complementary DNA libraries from meiotic cells that represent over 84% of the genes found in the budding yeast genome. We employed computational strategies to detect endogenous meiotic transcript isoforms as well as library-specific gene truncations. Furthermore, we developed a robust screening pipeline to test the effect of each complementary DNA on competitive fitness. Our multiday proof-of-principle time course revealed 877 complementary DNAs that were detrimental for competitive fitness when overexpressed. The list included mitochondrial proteins that cause dose-dependent disruption of cellular respiration as well as library-specific gene truncations that expose a dominant negative effect on competitive growth. Together, these high-quality complementary DNA libraries provide an important tool for systematically identifying meiotic genes, transcript isoforms, and protein domains that are important for a specific biological function., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Genetics Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The landscape of human tissue and cell type specific expression and co-regulation of senescence genes.
- Author
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Xu P, Wang M, Song WM, Wang Q, Yuan GC, Sudmant PH, Zare H, Tu Z, Orr ME, and Zhang B
- Subjects
- Fibroblasts metabolism, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Transcriptome, Cellular Senescence genetics, Endothelial Cells
- Abstract
Background: Cellular senescence is a complex stress response that impacts cellular function and organismal health. Multiple developmental and environmental factors, such as intrinsic cellular cues, radiation, oxidative stress, oncogenes, and protein accumulation, activate genes and pathways that can lead to senescence. Enormous efforts have been made to identify and characterize senescence genes (SnGs) in stress and disease systems. However, the prevalence of senescent cells in healthy human tissues and the global SnG expression signature in different cell types are poorly understood., Methods: This study performed an integrative gene network analysis of bulk and single-cell RNA-seq data in non-diseased human tissues to investigate SnG co-expression signatures and their cell-type specificity., Results: Through a comprehensive transcriptomic network analysis of 50 human tissues in the Genotype-Tissue Expression Project (GTEx) cohort, we identified SnG-enriched gene modules, characterized SnG co-expression patterns, and constructed aggregated SnG networks across primary tissues of the human body. Our network approaches identified 51 SnGs highly conserved across the human tissues, including CDKN1A (p21)-centered regulators that control cell cycle progression and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). The SnG-enriched modules showed remarkable cell-type specificity, especially in fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and immune cells. Further analyses of single-cell RNA-seq and spatial transcriptomic data independently validated the cell-type specific SnG signatures predicted by the network analysis., Conclusions: This study systematically revealed the co-regulated organizations and cell type specificity of SnGs in major human tissues, which can serve as a blueprint for future studies to map senescent cells and their cellular interactions in human tissues., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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37. Profiling senescent cells in human brains reveals neurons with CDKN2D/p19 and tau neuropathology.
- Author
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Dehkordi SK, Walker J, Sah E, Bennett E, Atrian F, Frost B, Woost B, Bennett RE, Orr TC, Zhou Y, Andhey PS, Colonna M, Sudmant PH, Xu P, Wang M, Zhang B, Zare H, and Orr ME
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p19 metabolism, Cellular Senescence genetics, Brain metabolism, Neurons, Alzheimer Disease genetics
- Abstract
Senescent cells contribute to pathology and dysfunction in animal models
1 . Their sparse distribution and heterogenous phenotype have presented challenges for detecting them in human tissues. We developed a senescence eigengene approach to identify these rare cells within large, diverse populations of postmortem human brain cells. Eigengenes are useful when no single gene reliably captures a phenotype, like senescence; they also help to reduce noise, which is important in large transcriptomic datasets where subtle signals from low-expressing genes can be lost. Each of our eigengenes detected ~2% senescent cells from a population of ~140,000 single nuclei derived from 76 postmortem human brains with various levels of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. More than 97% of the senescent cells were excitatory neurons and overlapped with tau-containing neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). Cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2D ( CDKN2D/ p19) was predicted as the most significant contributor to the primary senescence eigengene. RNAscope and immunofluorescence confirmed its elevated expression in AD brain tissue whereby p19-expressing neurons had 1.8-fold larger nuclei and significantly more cells with lipofuscin than p19-negative neurons. These hallmark senescence phenotypes were further elevated in the presence of NFTs. Collectively, CDKN2D/ p19-expressing neurons with NFTs represent a unique cellular population in human AD with a senescence phenotype. The eigengenes developed may be useful in future senescence profiling studies as they accurately identified senescent cells in snRNASeq datasets and predicted biomarkers for histological investigation.- Published
- 2021
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38. Origins and evolution of extreme life span in Pacific Ocean rockfishes.
- Author
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Kolora SRR, Owens GL, Vazquez JM, Stubbs A, Chatla K, Jainese C, Seeto K, McCrea M, Sandel MW, Vianna JA, Maslenikov K, Bachtrog D, Orr JW, Love M, and Sudmant PH
- Subjects
- Animals, Butyrophilins genetics, DNA Repair genetics, Gene Dosage, Genetic Pleiotropy, Genetic Speciation, Genetic Variation, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Immunomodulation genetics, Life History Traits, Mutation, Pacific Ocean, Phylogeny, Selection, Genetic, Whole Genome Sequencing, Biological Evolution, Genome, Longevity genetics, Perciformes genetics, Perciformes physiology
- Abstract
Pacific Ocean rockfishes (genus Sebastes ) exhibit extreme variation in life span, with some species being among the most long-lived extant vertebrates. We de novo assembled the genomes of 88 rockfish species and from these identified repeated signatures of positive selection in DNA repair pathways in long-lived taxa and 137 longevity-associated genes with direct effects on life span through insulin signaling and with pleiotropic effects through size and environmental adaptations. A genome-wide screen of structural variation reveals copy number expansions in the immune modulatory butyrophilin gene family in long-lived species. The evolution of different rockfish life histories is coupled to genetic diversity and reshapes the mutational spectrum driving segregating CpG→TpG variants in long-lived species. These analyses highlight the genetic innovations that underlie life history trait adaptations and, in turn, how they shape genomic diversity.
- Published
- 2021
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39. Elephant seal muscle cells adapt to sustained glucocorticoid exposure by shifting their metabolic phenotype.
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Torres-Velarde JM, Kolora SRR, Khudyakov JI, Crocker DE, Sudmant PH, and Vázquez-Medina JP
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Animals, Antioxidants metabolism, Fasting metabolism, Food Deprivation physiology, Phenotype, Receptors, Glucocorticoid genetics, Seals, Earless metabolism, Transcriptome physiology, Energy Metabolism physiology, Glucocorticoids metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Muscular Atrophy metabolism
- Abstract
Elephant seals experience natural periods of prolonged food deprivation while breeding, molting, and undergoing postnatal development. Prolonged food deprivation in elephant seals increases circulating glucocorticoids without inducing muscle atrophy, but the cellular mechanisms that allow elephant seals to cope with such conditions remain elusive. We generated a cellular model and conducted transcriptomic, metabolic, and morphological analyses to study how seal cells adapt to sustained glucocorticoid exposure. Seal muscle progenitor cells differentiate into contractile myotubes with a distinctive morphology, gene expression profile, and metabolic phenotype. Exposure to dexamethasone at three ascending concentrations for 48 h modulated the expression of six clusters of genes related to structural constituents of muscle and pathways associated with energy metabolism and cell survival. Knockdown of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and downstream expression analyses corroborated that GR mediates the observed effects. Dexamethasone also decreased cellular respiration, shifted the metabolic phenotype toward glycolysis, and induced mitochondrial fission and dissociation of mitochondria-endoplasmic reticulum (ER) interactions without decreasing cell viability. Knockdown of DNA damage-inducible transcript 4 (DDIT4), a GR target involved in the dissociation of mitochondria-ER membranes, recovered respiration and modulated antioxidant gene expression in myotubes treated with dexamethasone. These results show that adaptation to sustained glucocorticoid exposure in elephant seal myotubes involves a metabolic shift toward glycolysis, which is supported by alterations in mitochondrial morphology and a reduction in mitochondria-ER interactions, resulting in decreased respiration without compromising cell survival.
- Published
- 2021
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40. Reduced proteasome activity in the aging brain results in ribosome stoichiometry loss and aggregation.
- Author
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Kelmer Sacramento E, Kirkpatrick JM, Mazzetto M, Baumgart M, Bartolome A, Di Sanzo S, Caterino C, Sanguanini M, Papaevgeniou N, Lefaki M, Childs D, Bagnoli S, Terzibasi Tozzini E, Di Fraia D, Romanov N, Sudmant PH, Huber W, Chondrogianni N, Vendruscolo M, Cellerino A, and Ori A
- Subjects
- Aging genetics, Animals, Biophysical Phenomena, Cyprinodontiformes genetics, Mice, Inbred C57BL, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, Ribosomal Proteins genetics, Ribosomal Proteins metabolism, Risk Factors, Transcriptome genetics, Aging metabolism, Brain metabolism, Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex metabolism, Protein Aggregates, Ribosomes metabolism
- Abstract
A progressive loss of protein homeostasis is characteristic of aging and a driver of neurodegeneration. To investigate this process quantitatively, we characterized proteome dynamics during brain aging in the short-lived vertebrate Nothobranchius furzeri combining transcriptomics and proteomics. We detected a progressive reduction in the correlation between protein and mRNA, mainly due to post-transcriptional mechanisms that account for over 40% of the age-regulated proteins. These changes cause a progressive loss of stoichiometry in several protein complexes, including ribosomes, which show impaired assembly/disassembly and are enriched in protein aggregates in old brains. Mechanistically, we show that reduction of proteasome activity is an early event during brain aging and is sufficient to induce proteomic signatures of aging and loss of stoichiometry in vivo. Using longitudinal transcriptomic data, we show that the magnitude of early life decline in proteasome levels is a major risk factor for mortality. Our work defines causative events in the aging process that can be targeted to prevent loss of protein homeostasis and delay the onset of age-related neurodegeneration., (©2020 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.)
- Published
- 2020
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41. Blood-brain barrier dysfunction in aging induces hyperactivation of TGFβ signaling and chronic yet reversible neural dysfunction.
- Author
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Senatorov VV Jr, Friedman AR, Milikovsky DZ, Ofer J, Saar-Ashkenazy R, Charbash A, Jahan N, Chin G, Mihaly E, Lin JM, Ramsay HJ, Moghbel A, Preininger MK, Eddings CR, Harrison HV, Patel R, Shen Y, Ghanim H, Sheng H, Veksler R, Sudmant PH, Becker A, Hart B, Rogawski MA, Dillin A, Friedman A, and Kaufer D
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Albumins metabolism, Animals, Astrocytes drug effects, Astrocytes metabolism, Blood-Brain Barrier drug effects, Chronic Disease, Cognitive Dysfunction pathology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Gene Knockdown Techniques, Hippocampus drug effects, Hippocampus pathology, Hippocampus physiopathology, Humans, Mice, Transgenic, Middle Aged, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology, Receptor, Transforming Growth Factor-beta Type I antagonists & inhibitors, Receptor, Transforming Growth Factor-beta Type I metabolism, Young Adult, Aging pathology, Blood-Brain Barrier pathology, Blood-Brain Barrier physiopathology, Signal Transduction, Transforming Growth Factor beta metabolism
- Abstract
Aging involves a decline in neural function that contributes to cognitive impairment and disease. However, the mechanisms underlying the transition from a young-and-healthy to aged-and-dysfunctional brain are not well understood. Here, we report breakdown of the vascular blood-brain barrier (BBB) in aging humans and rodents, which begins as early as middle age and progresses to the end of the life span. Gain-of-function and loss-of-function manipulations show that this BBB dysfunction triggers hyperactivation of transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) signaling in astrocytes, which is necessary and sufficient to cause neural dysfunction and age-related pathology in rodents. Specifically, infusion of the serum protein albumin into the young rodent brain (mimicking BBB leakiness) induced astrocytic TGFβ signaling and an aged brain phenotype including aberrant electrocorticographic activity, vulnerability to seizures, and cognitive impairment. Furthermore, conditional genetic knockdown of astrocytic TGFβ receptors or pharmacological inhibition of TGFβ signaling reversed these symptomatic outcomes in aged mice. Last, we found that this same signaling pathway is activated in aging human subjects with BBB dysfunction. Our study identifies dysfunction in the neurovascular unit as one of the earliest triggers of neurological aging and demonstrates that the aging brain may retain considerable latent capacity, which can be revitalized by therapeutic inhibition of TGFβ signaling., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.)
- Published
- 2019
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42. Widespread Accumulation of Ribosome-Associated Isolated 3' UTRs in Neuronal Cell Populations of the Aging Brain.
- Author
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Sudmant PH, Lee H, Dominguez D, Heiman M, and Burge CB
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- ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters metabolism, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Cellular Senescence, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Mitochondria genetics, NIH 3T3 Cells, Neostriatum metabolism, Oxidative Stress, 3' Untranslated Regions genetics, Aging metabolism, Brain metabolism, Neurons metabolism, Ribosomes metabolism
- Abstract
Particular brain regions and cell populations exhibit increased susceptibility to aging-related stresses. Here, we describe the age-specific and brain-region-specific accumulation of ribosome-associated 3' UTR RNAs that lack the 5' UTR and open reading frame. Our study reveals that this phenomenon impacts hundreds of genes in aged D1 spiny projection neurons of the mouse striatum and also occurs in the aging human brain. Isolated 3' UTR accumulation is tightly correlated with mitochondrial gene expression and oxidative stress, with full-length mRNA expression that is reduced but not eliminated, and with production of short 3' UTR-encoded peptides. Depletion of the oxidation-sensitive Fe-S cluster ribosome recycling factor ABCE1 induces the accumulation of 3' UTRs, consistent with a model in which ribosome stalling and mRNA cleavage by No-Go decay yields isolated 3' UTR RNAs protected by ribosomes. Isolated 3' UTR accumulation is a hallmark of brain aging, likely reflecting regional differences in metabolism and oxidative stress., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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43. Corrigendum: The evolution of African great ape subtelomeric heterochromatin and the fusion of human chromosome 2.
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Ventura M, Catacchio CR, Sajjadian S, Vives L, Sudmant PH, Marques-Bonet T, Graves TA, Wilson RK, and Eichler EE
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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44. RNA Sequence Context Effects Measured In Vitro Predict In Vivo Protein Binding and Regulation.
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Taliaferro JM, Lambert NJ, Sudmant PH, Dominguez D, Merkin JJ, Alexis MS, Bazile C, and Burge CB
- Subjects
- Alternative Splicing, Animals, Binding Sites, Cattle, Cell Differentiation, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Fibroblasts cytology, Fibroblasts metabolism, Gene Expression, Macaca, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells cytology, Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells metabolism, Mutation, Neurons cytology, Neurons metabolism, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Nucleotide Motifs, Protein Binding, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs, RNA genetics, RNA metabolism, RNA Splicing Factors genetics, RNA Splicing Factors metabolism, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Rats, Software, Algorithms, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, RNA chemistry, RNA Splicing Factors chemistry, RNA-Binding Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Many RNA binding proteins (RBPs) bind specific RNA sequence motifs, but only a small fraction (∼15%-40%) of RBP motif occurrences are occupied in vivo. To determine which contextual features discriminate between bound and unbound motifs, we performed an in vitro binding assay using 12,000 mouse RNA sequences with the RBPs MBNL1 and RBFOX2. Surprisingly, the strength of binding to motif occurrences in vitro was significantly correlated with in vivo binding, developmental regulation, and evolutionary age of alternative splicing. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that the primary context effect that affects binding in vitro and in vivo is RNA secondary structure. Large-scale combinatorial mutagenesis of unfavorable sequence contexts revealed a consistent pattern whereby mutations that increased motif accessibility improved protein binding and regulatory activity. Our results indicate widespread inhibition of motif binding by local RNA secondary structure and suggest that mutations that alter sequence context commonly affect RBP binding and regulation., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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45. Emergence of a Homo sapiens-specific gene family and chromosome 16p11.2 CNV susceptibility.
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Nuttle X, Giannuzzi G, Duyzend MH, Schraiber JG, Narvaiza I, Sudmant PH, Penn O, Chiatante G, Malig M, Huddleston J, Benner C, Camponeschi F, Ciofi-Baffoni S, Stessman HA, Marchetto MC, Denman L, Harshman L, Baker C, Raja A, Penewit K, Janke N, Tang WJ, Ventura M, Banci L, Antonacci F, Akey JM, Amemiya CT, Gage FH, Reymond A, and Eichler EE
- Subjects
- Animals, Autistic Disorder genetics, Chromosome Breakage, Gene Duplication, Homeostasis genetics, Humans, Iron metabolism, Pan troglodytes genetics, Pongo genetics, Proteins analysis, Recombination, Genetic, Species Specificity, Time Factors, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 16 genetics, DNA Copy Number Variations genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Genetic differences that specify unique aspects of human evolution have typically been identified by comparative analyses between the genomes of humans and closely related primates, including more recently the genomes of archaic hominins. Not all regions of the genome, however, are equally amenable to such study. Recurrent copy number variation (CNV) at chromosome 16p11.2 accounts for approximately 1% of cases of autism and is mediated by a complex set of segmental duplications, many of which arose recently during human evolution. Here we reconstruct the evolutionary history of the locus and identify bolA family member 2 (BOLA2) as a gene duplicated exclusively in Homo sapiens. We estimate that a 95-kilobase-pair segment containing BOLA2 duplicated across the critical region approximately 282 thousand years ago (ka), one of the latest among a series of genomic changes that dramatically restructured the locus during hominid evolution. All humans examined carried one or more copies of the duplication, which nearly fixed early in the human lineage--a pattern unlikely to have arisen so rapidly in the absence of selection (P < 0.0097). We show that the duplication of BOLA2 led to a novel, human-specific in-frame fusion transcript and that BOLA2 copy number correlates with both RNA expression (r = 0.36) and protein level (r = 0.65), with the greatest expression difference between human and chimpanzee in experimentally derived stem cells. Analyses of 152 patients carrying a chromosome 16p11. rearrangement show that more than 96% of breakpoints occur within the H. sapiens-specific duplication. In summary, the duplicative transposition of BOLA2 at the root of the H. sapiens lineage about 282 ka simultaneously increased copy number of a gene associated with iron homeostasis and predisposed our species to recurrent rearrangements associated with disease.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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46. Meta-analysis of RNA-seq expression data across species, tissues and studies.
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Sudmant PH, Alexis MS, and Burge CB
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Organ Specificity, Species Specificity, Vertebrates, Evolution, Molecular, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Background: Differences in gene expression drive phenotypic differences between species, yet major organs and tissues generally have conserved gene expression programs. Several comparative transcriptomic studies have observed greater similarity in gene expression between homologous tissues from different vertebrate species than between diverse tissues of the same species. However, a recent study by Lin and colleagues reached the opposite conclusion. These studies differed in the species and tissues analyzed, and in technical details of library preparation, sequencing, read mapping, normalization, gene sets, and clustering methods., Results: To better understand gene expression evolution we reanalyzed data from four studies, including that of Lin, encompassing 6-13 tissues each from 11 vertebrate species using standardized mapping, normalization, and clustering methods. An analysis of independent data showed that the set of tissues chosen by Lin et al. were more similar to each other than those analyzed by previous studies. Comparing expression in five common tissues from the four studies, we observed that samples clustered exclusively by tissue rather than by species or study, supporting conservation of organ physiology in mammals. Furthermore, inter-study distances between homologous tissues were generally less than intra-study distances among different tissues, enabling informative meta-analyses. Notably, when comparing expression divergence of tissues over time to expression variation across 51 human GTEx tissues, we could accurately predict the clustering of expression for arbitrary pairs of tissues and species., Conclusions: These results provide a framework for the design of future evolutionary studies of gene expression and demonstrate the utility of comparing RNA-seq data across studies.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. An integrated map of structural variation in 2,504 human genomes.
- Author
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Sudmant PH, Rausch T, Gardner EJ, Handsaker RE, Abyzov A, Huddleston J, Zhang Y, Ye K, Jun G, Fritz MH, Konkel MK, Malhotra A, Stütz AM, Shi X, Casale FP, Chen J, Hormozdiari F, Dayama G, Chen K, Malig M, Chaisson MJP, Walter K, Meiers S, Kashin S, Garrison E, Auton A, Lam HYK, Mu XJ, Alkan C, Antaki D, Bae T, Cerveira E, Chines P, Chong Z, Clarke L, Dal E, Ding L, Emery S, Fan X, Gujral M, Kahveci F, Kidd JM, Kong Y, Lameijer EW, McCarthy S, Flicek P, Gibbs RA, Marth G, Mason CE, Menelaou A, Muzny DM, Nelson BJ, Noor A, Parrish NF, Pendleton M, Quitadamo A, Raeder B, Schadt EE, Romanovitch M, Schlattl A, Sebra R, Shabalin AA, Untergasser A, Walker JA, Wang M, Yu F, Zhang C, Zhang J, Zheng-Bradley X, Zhou W, Zichner T, Sebat J, Batzer MA, McCarroll SA, Mills RE, Gerstein MB, Bashir A, Stegle O, Devine SE, Lee C, Eichler EE, and Korbel JO
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetics, Medical, Genetics, Population, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genomics, Genotype, Haplotypes genetics, Homozygote, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation Rate, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Sequence Deletion genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Genome, Human genetics, Physical Chromosome Mapping
- Abstract
Structural variants are implicated in numerous diseases and make up the majority of varying nucleotides among human genomes. Here we describe an integrated set of eight structural variant classes comprising both balanced and unbalanced variants, which we constructed using short-read DNA sequencing data and statistically phased onto haplotype blocks in 26 human populations. Analysing this set, we identify numerous gene-intersecting structural variants exhibiting population stratification and describe naturally occurring homozygous gene knockouts that suggest the dispensability of a variety of human genes. We demonstrate that structural variants are enriched on haplotypes identified by genome-wide association studies and exhibit enrichment for expression quantitative trait loci. Additionally, we uncover appreciable levels of structural variant complexity at different scales, including genic loci subject to clusters of repeated rearrangement and complex structural variants with multiple breakpoints likely to have formed through individual mutational events. Our catalogue will enhance future studies into structural variant demography, functional impact and disease association.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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48. The Role of the Antiviral APOBEC3 Gene Family in Protecting Chimpanzees against Lentiviruses from Monkeys.
- Author
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Etienne L, Bibollet-Ruche F, Sudmant PH, Wu LI, Hahn BH, and Emerman M
- Subjects
- Animals, Blotting, Western, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cytidine Deaminase immunology, Genes, vif genetics, Haplorhini, Lentivirus genetics, Lentivirus Infections immunology, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Cytidine Deaminase genetics, Lentivirus Infections genetics, Pan troglodytes immunology, Pan troglodytes virology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus genetics
- Abstract
Cross-species transmissions of viruses from animals to humans are at the origin of major human pathogenic viruses. While the role of ecological and epidemiological factors in the emergence of new pathogens is well documented, the importance of host factors is often unknown. Chimpanzees are the closest relatives of humans and the animal reservoir at the origin of the human AIDS pandemic. However, despite being regularly exposed to monkey lentiviruses through hunting, chimpanzees are naturally infected by only a single simian immunodeficiency virus, SIVcpz. Here, we asked why chimpanzees appear to be protected against the successful emergence of other SIVs. In particular, we investigated the role of the chimpanzee APOBEC3 genes in providing a barrier to infection by most monkey lentiviruses. We found that most SIV Vifs, including Vif from SIVwrc infecting western-red colobus, the chimpanzee's main monkey prey in West Africa, could not antagonize chimpanzee APOBEC3G. Moreover, chimpanzee APOBEC3D, as well as APOBEC3F and APOBEC3H, provided additional protection against SIV Vif antagonism. Consequently, lentiviral replication in primary chimpanzee CD4(+) T cells was dependent on the presence of a lentiviral vif gene that could antagonize chimpanzee APOBEC3s. Finally, by identifying and functionally characterizing several APOBEC3 gene polymorphisms in both common chimpanzees and bonobos, we found that these ape populations encode APOBEC3 proteins that are uniformly resistant to antagonism by monkey lentiviruses.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Global diversity, population stratification, and selection of human copy-number variation.
- Author
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Sudmant PH, Mallick S, Nelson BJ, Hormozdiari F, Krumm N, Huddleston J, Coe BP, Baker C, Nordenfelt S, Bamshad M, Jorde LB, Posukh OL, Sahakyan H, Watkins WS, Yepiskoposyan L, Abdullah MS, Bravi CM, Capelli C, Hervig T, Wee JT, Tyler-Smith C, van Driem G, Romero IG, Jha AR, Karachanak-Yankova S, Toncheva D, Comas D, Henn B, Kivisild T, Ruiz-Linares A, Sajantila A, Metspalu E, Parik J, Villems R, Starikovskaya EB, Ayodo G, Beall CM, Di Rienzo A, Hammer MF, Khusainova R, Khusnutdinova E, Klitz W, Winkler C, Labuda D, Metspalu M, Tishkoff SA, Dryomov S, Sukernik R, Patterson N, Reich D, and Eichler EE
- Subjects
- Animals, Black People classification, Black People genetics, Hominidae genetics, Humans, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander classification, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander genetics, Phylogeny, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Selection, Genetic, DNA Copy Number Variations, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Duplication, Genome, Human genetics, Population genetics, Sequence Deletion
- Abstract
In order to explore the diversity and selective signatures of duplication and deletion human copy-number variants (CNVs), we sequenced 236 individuals from 125 distinct human populations. We observed that duplications exhibit fundamentally different population genetic and selective signatures than deletions and are more likely to be stratified between human populations. Through reconstruction of the ancestral human genome, we identify megabases of DNA lost in different human lineages and pinpoint large duplications that introgressed from the extinct Denisova lineage now found at high frequency exclusively in Oceanic populations. We find that the proportion of CNV base pairs to single-nucleotide-variant base pairs is greater among non-Africans than it is among African populations, but we conclude that this difference is likely due to unique aspects of non-African population history as opposed to differences in CNV load., (Copyright © 2015, American Association for the Advancement of Science.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Corrigendum: MIPSTR: a method for multiplex genotyping of germline and somatic STR variation across many individuals.
- Author
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Carlson KD, Sudmant PH, Press MO, Eichler EE, Shendure J, and Queitsch C
- Published
- 2015
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