Back to Search Start Over

Structurally divergent and recurrently mutated regions of primate genomes

Authors :
Yafei Mao
William T. Harvey
David Porubsky
Katherine M. Munson
Kendra Hoekzema
Alexandra P. Lewis
Peter A. Audano
Allison Rozanski
Xiangyu Yang
Shilong Zhang
David S. Gordon
Xiaoxi Wei
Glennis A. Logsdon
Marina Haukness
Philip C. Dishuck
Hyeonsoo Jeong
Ricardo del Rosario
Vanessa L. Bauer
Will T. Fattor
Gregory K. Wilkerson
Qing Lu
Benedict Paten
Guoping Feng
Sara L. Sawyer
Wesley C. Warren
Lucia Carbone
Evan E. Eichler
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

To better understand the pattern of primate genome structural variation, we sequenced and assembled using multiple long-read sequencing technologies the genomes of eight nonhuman primate species, including New World monkeys (owl monkey and marmoset), Old World monkey (macaque), Asian apes (orangutan and gibbon), and African ape lineages (gorilla, bonobo, and chimpanzee). Compared to the human genome, we identified 1,338,997 lineage-specific fixed structural variants (SVs) disrupting 1,561 protein-coding genes and 136,932 regulatory elements, including the most complete set of human-specific fixed differences. Across 50 million years of primate evolution, we estimate that 819.47 Mbp or ~27% of the genome has been affected by SVs based on analysis of these primate lineages. We identify 1,607 structurally divergent regions (SDRs) wherein recurrent structural variation contributes to creating SV hotspots where genes are recurrently lost (CARDs,ABCD7,OLAH) and new lineage-specific genes are generated (e.g.,CKAP2,NEK5) and have become targets of rapid chromosomal diversification and positive selection (e.g.,RGPDs). High-fidelity long-read sequencing has made these dynamic regions of the genome accessible for sequence-level analyses within and between primate species for the first time.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d04ea62ec74ca9f3d9403f8c476d9a54
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.07.531415