Back to Search Start Over

A Chromosome-Length Reference Genome for the Endangered Pacific Pocket Mouse Reveals Recent Inbreeding in a Historically Large Population

Authors :
Aryn P Wilder
Olga Dudchenko
Caitlin Curry
Marisa Korody
Sheela P Turbek
Mark Daly
Ann Misuraca
Gaojianyong Wang
Ruqayya Khan
David Weisz
Julie Fronczek
Erez Lieberman Aiden
Marlys L Houck
Debra M Shier
Oliver A Ryder
Cynthia C Steiner
Source :
Genome Biology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

High-quality reference genomes are fundamental tools for understanding population history, and can provide estimates of genetic and demographic parameters relevant to the conservation of biodiversity. The federally endangered Pacific pocket mouse (PPM), which persists in three small, isolated populations in southern California, is a promising model for studying how demographic history shapes genetic diversity, and how diversity in turn may influence extinction risk. To facilitate these studies in PPM, we combined PacBio HiFi long reads with Omni-C and Hi-C data to generate a de novo genome assembly, and annotated the genome using RNAseq. The assembly comprised 28 chromosome-length scaffolds (N50 = 72.6 MB) and the complete mitochondrial genome, and included a long heterochromatic region on chromosome 18 not represented in the previously available short-read assembly. Heterozygosity was highly variable across the genome of the reference individual, with 18% of windows falling in runs of homozygosity (ROH) >1 MB, and nearly 9% in tracts spanning >5 MB. Yet outside of ROH, heterozygosity was relatively high (0.0027), and historical Ne estimates were large. These patterns of genetic variation suggest recent inbreeding in a formerly large population. Currently the most contiguous assembly for a heteromyid rodent, this reference genome provides insight into the past and recent demographic history of the population, and will be a critical tool for management and future studies of outbreeding depression, inbreeding depression, and genetic load.

Details

ISSN :
17596653
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ed627dc86cacc650d914ab4badb53d6