生物
基因
遗传学
基因组
适应(眼睛)
人口
遗传多样性
遗传变异
进化生物学
编码区
表型
人口学
神经科学
社会学
作者
Zhengcao Li,Xiaohong Liu,Chen Wang,Zhenyang Li,Bingjun Jiang,Ruifeng Zhang,Tianlan Lu,Youping Qu,Sheng He,Haifan Chen,Yafei Mao,Qingnan Li,Torsten Pook,Wenjin Yu,Yanjun Zan,Hui Zhang,Lü Li,Keying Wen,Yaosheng Chen
出处
期刊:Genome Research
[Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory]
日期:2023-10-01
卷期号:33 (10): 1833-1847
被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1101/gr.277638.122
摘要
Structural variations have emerged as an important driving force for genome evolution and phenotypic variation in various organisms, yet their contributions to genetic diversity and adaptation in domesticated animals remain largely unknown. Here we constructed a pangenome based on 250 sequenced individuals from 32 pig breeds in Eurasia and systematically characterized coding sequence presence/absence variations (PAVs) within pigs. We identified 308.3-Mb nonreference sequences and 3438 novel genes absent from the current reference genome. Gene PAV analysis showed that 16.8% of the genes in the pangene catalog undergo PAV. A number of newly identified dispensable genes showed close associations with adaptation. For instance, several novel swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) genes discovered in nonreference sequences potentially participate in immune responses to productive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) infection. We delineated previously unidentified features of the pig mobilome that contained 490,480 transposable element insertion polymorphisms (TIPs) resulting from recent mobilization of 970 TE families, and investigated their population dynamics along with influences on population differentiation and gene expression. In addition, several candidate adaptive TE insertions were detected to be co-opted into genes responsible for responses to hypoxia, skeletal development, regulation of heart contraction, and neuronal cell development, likely contributing to local adaptation of Tibetan wild boars. These findings enhance our understanding on hidden layers of the genetic diversity in pigs and provide novel insights into the role of SVs in the evolutionary adaptation of mammals.
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