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A new duck genome reveals conserved and convergently evolved chromosome architectures of birds and mammals.

Authors :
Li, Jing
Zhang, Jilin
Liu, Jing
Zhou, Yang
Cai, Cheng
Xu, Luohao
Dai, Xuelei
Feng, Shaohong
Guo, Chunxue
Rao, Jinpeng
Wei, Kai
Jarvis, Erich D
Jiang, Yu
Zhou, Zhengkui
Zhang, Guojie
Zhou, Qi
Source :
GigaScience. Jan2021, Vol. 10 Issue 1, p1-15. 15p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Ducks have a typical avian karyotype that consists of macro- and microchromosomes, but a pair of much less differentiated ZW sex chromosomes compared to chickens. To elucidate the evolution of chromosome architectures between ducks and chickens, and between birds and mammals, we produced a nearly complete chromosomal assembly of a female Pekin duck by combining long-read sequencing and multiplatform scaffolding techniques. Results A major improvement of genome assembly and annotation quality resulted from the successful resolution of lineage-specific propagated repeats that fragmented the previous Illumina-based assembly. We found that the duck topologically associated domains (TAD) are demarcated by putative binding sites of the insulator protein CTCF, housekeeping genes, or transitions of active/inactive chromatin compartments, indicating conserved mechanisms of spatial chromosome folding with mammals. There are extensive overlaps of TAD boundaries between duck and chicken, and also between the TAD boundaries and chromosome inversion breakpoints. This suggests strong natural selection pressure on maintaining regulatory domain integrity, or vulnerability of TAD boundaries to DNA double-strand breaks. The duck W chromosome retains 2.5-fold more genes relative to chicken. Similar to the independently evolved human Y chromosome, the duck W evolved massive dispersed palindromic structures, and a pattern of sequence divergence with the Z chromosome that reflects stepwise suppression of homologous recombination. Conclusions Our results provide novel insights into the conserved and convergently evolved chromosome features of birds and mammals, and also importantly add to the genomic resources for poultry studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2047217X
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
GigaScience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148432122
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giaa142