Back to Search Start Over

High-resolution comparative analysis of great ape genomes

Authors :
Mark Chaisson
Jay Shendure
Melanie Sorensen
Christopher M. Hill
Zev N. Kronenberg
Fred H. Gage
Andy Wing Chun Pang
Shwetha C. Murali
Olivia S. Meyerson
Jason G. Underwood
Carl Baker
Kendra Hoekzema
Ruolan Qiu
Bradley J. Nelson
Katherine M. Munson
Susan K. Dutcher
Ahmet M. Denli
Wesley C. Warren
Stuart Cantsilieris
Archana Raja
Ernest T. Lam
Alex Hastie
Richard K. Wilson
Karen Clark
Benedict Paten
David Haussler
Tina A. Graves-Lindsay
Joyce V. Lee
Emma R. Hoppe
Alex A. Pollen
Mark Diekhans
Valerie A. Schneider
Nicola Lorusso
Robert S. Fulton
Fereydoun Hormozdiari
David Gordon
Mario Ventura
Evan E. Eichler
Anne Marie E. Welch
Joel Armstrong
Max L. Dougherty
PingHsun Hsieh
Han Cao
Ian T. Fiddes
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.), vol 360, iss 6393
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Understanding the genetic differences that make us human is a long-standing endeavor that requires the comprehensive discovery and comparison of all forms of genetic variation within great ape lineages. RATIONALE The varied quality and completeness of ape genomes have limited comparative genetic analyses. To eliminate this contiguity and quality disparity, we generated human and nonhuman ape genome assemblies without the guidance of the human reference genome. These new genome assemblies enable both coarse and fine-scale comparative genomic studies. RESULTS We sequenced and assembled two human, one chimpanzee, and one orangutan genome using high-coverage (>65x) single-molecule, real-time (SMRT) long-read sequencing technology. We also sequenced more than 500,000 full-length complementary DNA samples from induced pluripotent stem cells to construct de novo gene models, increasing our knowledge of transcript diversity in each ape lineage. The new nonhuman ape genome assemblies improve gene annotation and genomic contiguity (by 30- to 500-fold), resulting in the identification of larger synteny blocks (by 22- to 74-fold) when compared to earlier assemblies. Including the latest gorilla genome, we now estimate that 83% of the ape genomes can be compared in a multiple sequence alignment. We observe a modest increase in single-nucleotide variant divergence compared to previous genome analyses and estimate that 36% of human autosomal DNA is subject to incomplete lineage sorting. We fully resolve most common repeat differences, including full-length retrotransposons such as the African ape-specific endogenous retroviral element PtERV1. We show that the spread of this element independently in the gorilla and chimpanzee lineage likely resulted from a founder element that failed to segregate to the human lineage because of incomplete lineage sorting. The improved sequence contiguity allowed a more systematic discovery of structural variation (>50 base pairs in length) (see the figure). We detected 614,186 ape deletions, insertions, and inversions, assigning each to specific ape lineages. Unbiased genome scaffolding (optical maps, bacterial artificial chromosome sequencing, and fluorescence in situ hybridization) led to the discovery of large, unknown complex inversions in gene-rich regions. Of the 17,789 fixed human-specific insertions and deletions, we focus on those of potential functional effect. We identify 90 that are predicted to disrupt genes and an additional 643 that likely affect regulatory regions, more than doubling the number of human-specific deletions that remove regulatory sequence in the human lineage. We investigate the association of structural variation with changes in human-chimpanzee brain gene expression using cerebral organoids as a proxy for expression differences. Genes associated with fixed structural variants (SVs) show a pattern of down-regulation in human radial glial neural progenitors, whereas human-specific duplications are associated with up-regulated genes in human radial glial and excitatory neurons (see the figure). CONCLUSION The improved ape genome assemblies provide the most comprehensive view to date of intermediate-size structural variation and highlight several dozen genes associated with structural variation and brain-expression differences between humans and chimpanzees. These new references will provide a stepping stone for the completion of great ape genomes at a quality commensurate with the human reference genome and, ultimately, an understanding of the genetic differences that make us human.

Details

ISSN :
10959203
Volume :
360
Issue :
6393
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....303a4bf8adee0d27a752e4b6594be6aa