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Evolution of gene regulation in ruminants differs between evolutionary breakpoint regions and homologous synteny blocks
Genome Research
  • Marta Farré, Royal Veterinary College University of London
  • Jaebum Kim, Konkuk University
  • Anastasia A. Proskuryakova, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Siberian Branch of the RAS
  • Yang Zhang, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Anastasia I. Kulemzina, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Siberian Branch of the RAS
  • Qiye Li, China National Genebank
  • Yang Zhou, China National Genebank
  • Yingqi Xiong, China National Genebank
  • Jennifer L. Johnson, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Polina L. Perelman, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Siberian Branch of the RAS
  • Warren E. Johnson, Conservation and Research Center (National Zoo)
  • Wesley C. Warren, University of Missouri
  • Anna V. Kukekova, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Guojie Zhang, China National Genebank
  • Stephen J. O’Brien, Saint Petersburg State University
  • Oliver A. Ryder, Institute for Conservation Research
  • Alexander S. Graphodatsky, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Siberian Branch of the RAS
  • Jian Ma, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Harris A. Lewin, University of California, Davis
  • Denis M. Larkin, Royal Veterinary College University of London
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2019
Abstract

The role of chromosome rearrangements in driving evolution has been a long-standing question of evolutionary biology. Here we focused on ruminants as a model to assess how rearrangements may have contributed to the evolution of gene regulation. Using reconstructed ancestral karyotypes of Cetartiodactyls, Ruminants, Pecorans, and Bovids, we traced patterns of gross chromosome changes. We found that the lineage leading to the ruminant ancestor after the split from other cetartiodactyls was characterized by mostly intrachromosomal changes, whereas the lineage leading to the pecoran ancestor (including all livestock ruminants) included multiple interchromosomal changes. We observed that the liver cell putative enhancers in the ruminant evolutionary breakpoint regions are highly enriched for DNA sequences under selective constraint acting on lineage-specific transposable elements (TEs) and a set of 25 specific transcription factor (TF) binding motifs associated with recently active TEs. Coupled with gene expression data, we found that genes near ruminant breakpoint regions exhibit more divergent expression profiles among species, particularly in cattle, which is consistent with the phylogenetic origin of these breakpoint regions. This divergence was significantly greater in genes with enhancers that contain at least one of the 25 specific TF binding motifs and located near bovidae-to-cattle lineage breakpoint regions. Taken together, by combining ancestral karyotype reconstructions with analysis of cis regulatory element and gene expression evolution, our work demonstrated that lineage-specific regulatory elements colocalized with gross chromosome rearrangements may have provided valuable functional modifications that helped to shape ruminant evolution.

DOI
10.1101/gr.239863.118
Citation Information
Marta Farré, Jaebum Kim, Anastasia A. Proskuryakova, Yang Zhang, et al.. "Evolution of gene regulation in ruminants differs between evolutionary breakpoint regions and homologous synteny blocks" Genome Research Vol. 29 Iss. 4 (2019) p. 576 - 589 ISSN: 15495469
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/stephen-obrien/740/