绘制六种古巴蜥蜴的基因组,并了解其多样化过程中的遗传变化。

Shunsuke Kanamori, Luis M Díaz, Antonio Cádiz, Katsushi Yamaguchi, Shuji Shigenobu, Masakado Kawata
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:在物种多样化和适应性辐射过程中检测基因组变异及其积累过程对于了解进化的分子和遗传基础具有重要意义。西印度群岛的蜥蜴由于其形态和生态的反复进化,是研究进化机制的良好模型。研究人员对6种具有不同生态形态和热生境的古巴斑蜥(Anolis isolepis, Anolis allisoni, Anolis porcatus, Anolis alllogus, Anolis homolechis和Anolis sagrei)进行了从头基因组组装。我们对这些基因组组合进行了比较分析,以调查在其多样化过程中发生的遗传变化。结果:我们构建了具有较长支架和较高基因完整性的新基因组草图,支架N50在5.56 ~ 39.79 Mb之间,脊椎动物基准通用单拷贝同源序列的完整性在77.5% ~ 86.9%之间。通过对重复元素组成和景观的比较,揭示了古巴干冠种和干地种在积累过程中的差异,以及每个干地种中LINE的几个科的单独扩展。重复基因分析表明,古巴斑蜥重复基因数量的比例差异可能与栖息地范围的差异有关。此外,成对序贯马尔可夫聚结分析表明,每个物种的有效种群规模可能受到古巴地质历史的影响。结论:我们提供了6只古巴斑蜥的基因组草图,并检测到可能参与适应性进化的物种和谱系特异性转座子积累和基因拷贝数变化。估计了过去有效种群规模的变化过程,并对其影响因素进行了推断。这些结果为蜥蜴多样化的遗传基础提供了新的认识,并有望为进一步阐明其多样化机制奠定基础。
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Draft genome of six Cuban Anolis lizards and insights into genetic changes during their diversification.

Background: Detecting genomic variants and their accumulation processes during species diversification and adaptive radiation is important for understanding the molecular and genetic basis of evolution. Anolis lizards in the West Indies are good models for studying evolutionary mechanisms because of the repeated evolution of their morphology and the ecology. We performed de novo genome assembly of six Cuban Anolis lizards with different ecomorphs and thermal habitats (Anolis isolepis, Anolis allisoni, Anolis porcatus, Anolis allogus, Anolis homolechis, and Anolis sagrei). We carried out a comparative analysis of these genome assemblies to investigate the genetic changes that occurred during their diversification.

Results: We reconstructed novel draft genomes with relatively long scaffolds and high gene completeness, with the scaffold N50 ranging from 5.56 to 39.79 Mb and vertebrate Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs completeness ranging from 77.5% to 86.9%. Comparing the repeat element compositions and landscapes revealed differences in the accumulation process between Cuban trunk-crown and trunk-ground species and separate expansions of several families of LINE in each Cuban trunk-ground species. Duplicated gene analysis suggested that the proportional differences in duplicated gene numbers among Cuban Anolis lizards may be associated with differences in their habitat ranges. Additionally, Pairwise Sequentially Markovian Coalescent analysis suggested that the effective population sizes of each species may have been affected by Cuba's geohistory.

Conclusions: We provide draft genomes of six Cuban Anolis lizards and detected species and lineage-specific transposon accumulation and gene copy number changes that may be involved in adaptive evolution. The change processes in the past effective population size was also estimated, and the factors involved were inferred. These results provide new insights into the genetic basis of Anolis lizard diversification and are expected to serve as a stepping stone for the further elucidation of their diversification mechanisms.

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