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Repeat associated mechanisms of genome evolution and function revealed by the Mus caroli and Mus pahari genomes

Authors :
Anthony G. Doran
Václav Janoušek
David Martín-Gálvez
Robert C. Karn
Fengtang Yang
Fergal J. Martin
Klara Stefflova
Mario Stanke
Duncan T. Odom
William Chow
Ian T. Fiddes
Paul Flicek
Mark Gerstein
Golbahar Yazdanifar
Christine Feig
Ian Streeter
Ben J. Ward
Wasiu Akanni
Varshith Chakrapani
Cock van Oosterhout
David Thybert
Sarah Aldridge
Amonida Zadissa
Laura Clarke
David J. Adams
Christina M. Laukaitis
Alvis Brazma
Maša Roller
Thomas M. Keane
Michael A. Quail
Lilue Jingtao
Cristina Sisu
Carla Cummins
Bronwen Aken
Matthieu Muffato
Leo Goodstadt
Frédéric Veyrunes
Matthew Howell
Fabio C. P. Navarro
Son Pham
Mikhail Kolmogorov
Matthew Dunn
Ambre Aurore Josselin
Benedict Paten
Kerstin Howe
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms driving lineage-specific evolution in both primates and rodents has been hindered by the lack of sister clades with a similar phylogenetic structure having high-quality genome assemblies. Here, we have created chromosome-level assemblies of the Mus caroli and Mus pahari genomes. Together with the Mus musculus and Rattus norvegicus genomes, this set of rodent genomes is similar in divergence times to the Hominidae (human-chimpanzee-gorilla-orangutan). By comparing the evolutionary dynamics between the Muridae and Hominidae, we identified punctate events of chromosome reshuffling that shaped the ancestral karyotype of Mus musculus and Mus caroli between 3 to 6 MYA, but that are absent in the Hominidae. In fact, Hominidae show between four-and seven-fold lower rates of nucleotide change and feature turnover in both neutral and functional sequences suggesting an underlying coherence to the Muridae acceleration. Our system of matched, high-quality genome assemblies revealed how specific classes of repeats can play lineage-specific roles in related species. For example, recent LINE activity has remodeled protein-coding loci to a greater extent across the Muridae than the Hominidae, with functional consequences at the species level such as reproductive isolation. Furthermore, we charted a Muridae-specific retrotransposon expansion at unprecedented resolution, revealing how a single nucleotide mutation transformed a specific SINE element into an active CTCF binding site carrier specifically in Mus caroli. This process resulted in thousands of novel, species-specific CTCF binding sites. Our results demonstrate that the comparison of matched phylogenetic sets of genomes will be an increasingly powerful strategy for understanding mammalian biology.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e2986e9e3db033fccd34237ec60a2b55
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/158659