| Literature DB >> 26373886 |
Jinlong Huang1, Yiping Zhao1, Dongyi Bai1, Wunierfu Shiraigol1, Bei Li1, Lihua Yang1, Jing Wu1, Wuyundalai Bao1, Xiujuan Ren1, Burenqiqige Jin1, Qinan Zhao1, Anaer Li1, Sarula Bao1, Wuyingga Bao1, Zhencun Xing1, Aoruga An1, Yahan Gao1, Ruiyuan Wei1, Yirugeletu Bao1, Taoketao Bao1, Haige Han1, Haitang Bai1, Yanqing Bao1, Yuhong Zhang1, Dorjsuren Daidiikhuu1, Wenjing Zhao2, Shuyun Liu2, Jinmei Ding2, Weixing Ye3, Fangmei Ding3, Zikui Sun3, Yixiang Shi3, Yan Zhang4, He Meng2, Manglai Dugarjaviin1.
Abstract
The donkey, like the horse, is a promising model for exploring karyotypic instability. We report the de novo whole-genome assemblies of the donkey and the Asiatic wild ass. Our results reflect the distinct characteristics of donkeys, including more effective energy metabolism and better immunity than horses. The donkey shows a steady demographic trajectory. We detected abundant satellite sequences in some inactive centromere regions but not in neocentromere regions, while ribosomal RNAs frequently emerged in neocentromere regions but not in the obsolete centromere regions. Expanded miRNA families and five newly discovered miRNA target genes involved in meiosis may be associated with fast karyotype evolution. APC/C, controlling sister chromatid segregation, cytokinesis, and the establishment of the G1 cell cycle phase were identified by analysis of miRNA targets and rapidly evolving genes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26373886 PMCID: PMC4571621 DOI: 10.1038/srep14106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Donkey genome assembly and structural annotation.
| Total sequence length | 2,357,920,133 bp |
| Total contig length | 2,324,805,719 bp |
| Number of contigs >200 bp | 71,732 |
| N50 contig length | 66,737 bp |
| Number of scaffolds >1 kb | 2,166 |
| N50 scaffolds length | 3,803,025 bp |
| Average sequence depth | 42.4× |
| GC content | 41.28% |
| Protein-coding genes | 23,214 |
Figure 1Analysis of evolution genomics.
(a) Reconstructed population demographics of donkey, Asiatic wild ass and horse for the last 1 million years. (b) Phylogenetic tree of nine mammals. The numbers represent the time of divergence. The proportion of expanded and contracted gene families are shown as pie charts at branch termini. (c) Rapidly evolving functions of donkey and horse.
Figure 2Whole genome synteny analysis.
Comparisons of the donkey, wild horse and Mongolian horse genomes to the Thoroughbred horse genome. (a) The number of rearrangement blocks in donkey, wild horse, Mongolian horse genomes with respect to the Thoroughbred genome. (b) The content of some repetitive sequences significantly increased in rearrangement regions compared with the collinearity region.
Figure 3Chromosomal rearrangements and characteristic sequences in centromere regions.
(a) Landscape of chromosomal rearrangements. Column 1: Six regions categorized in donkey and horse chromosomes. They are: #1(orange): Centromere regions in the horse chromosome; #2(green): Centromere regions in the donkey chromosome (at least 6 centromeres are neocentromeres); #3(blue): Homologous regions in the horse chromosome related to region #2; #4(red): Homologous regions in the donkey chromosome related to region #1; #5(brown): Other regions in the horse chromosome; #6(purple): Other regions in the donkey chromosome. (EAS: Equus asinus; ECA:Equus caballus). The arrow indicates the direction of two corresponding centromere repositionings. The question mark (‘?’) indicates the direction of two corresponding centromere repositionings that are not classified. Column 2: Synteny analysis between region #4 and region #1. Column 3: Synteny analysis between region #2 and region #3. Column 4: Synteny analysis between region #6 and region #5. (b) Chromosomal rearrangements between donkey and Thoroughbred horse. Black vertical lines represent rearrangement regions in the Thoroughbred horse chromosomes. (c) Numbers of rearrangements events in seven pairs of chromosomes. (d) Distribution of satellite sequences and ribosomal RNA in region #1, #3 of ECA22 and region #2, #4 of EAS15. (e) Proportion of satellite sequences in regions #1–6. (f) Proportion of ribosomal RNA in regions #1–6.
Figure 4Novel miRNAs, expanded miRNA families and rapidly evolving genes in donkey, which are associated with the meiosis pathway.
(a) Expanded miRNA families (red) in the donkey genome. (b) Five novel miRNAs targeting meiosis in the donkey genome identified by RNA-seq. (c) The donkey meiosis pathway. Small boxes indicate that the gene is regulated by novel miRNAs, expanded miRNA families or rapidly evolving genes.