Literature DB >> 29078308

Survival and divergence in a small group: The extraordinary genomic history of the endangered Apennine brown bear stragglers.

Andrea Benazzo1, Emiliano Trucchi1,2, James A Cahill3, Pierpaolo Maisano Delser4,5,6, Stefano Mona4,5, Matteo Fumagalli7, Lynsey Bunnefeld8,9, Luca Cornetti10, Silvia Ghirotto1, Matteo Girardi11, Lino Ometto12,13, Alex Panziera1, Omar Rota-Stabelli12, Enrico Zanetti1, Alexandros Karamanlidis14, Claudio Groff15, Ladislav Paule16, Leonardo Gentile17, Carles Vilà18, Saverio Vicario19, Luigi Boitani20, Ludovic Orlando21, Silvia Fuselli1, Cristiano Vernesi11, Beth Shapiro3, Paolo Ciucci20, Giorgio Bertorelle22.   

Abstract

About 100 km east of Rome, in the central Apennine Mountains, a critically endangered population of ∼50 brown bears live in complete isolation. Mating outside this population is prevented by several 100 km of bear-free territories. We exploited this natural experiment to better understand the gene and genomic consequences of surviving at extremely small population size. We found that brown bear populations in Europe lost connectivity since Neolithic times, when farming communities expanded and forest burning was used for land clearance. In central Italy, this resulted in a 40-fold population decline. The overall genomic impact of this decline included the complete loss of variation in the mitochondrial genome and along long stretches of the nuclear genome. Several private and deleterious amino acid changes were fixed by random drift; predicted effects include energy deficit, muscle weakness, anomalies in cranial and skeletal development, and reduced aggressiveness. Despite this extreme loss of diversity, Apennine bear genomes show nonrandom peaks of high variation, possibly maintained by balancing selection, at genomic regions significantly enriched for genes associated with immune and olfactory systems. Challenging the paradigm of increased extinction risk in small populations, we suggest that random fixation of deleterious alleles (i) can be an important driver of divergence in isolation, (ii) can be tolerated when balancing selection prevents random loss of variation at important genes, and (iii) is followed by or results directly in favorable behavioral changes. Published under the PNAS license.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Neolithic impact; Ursus arctos; balancing selection; genetic drift; genetic load

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29078308      PMCID: PMC5692547          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707279114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  57 in total

1.  Inference of population structure using multilocus genotype data: linked loci and correlated allele frequencies.

Authors:  Daniel Falush; Matthew Stephens; Jonathan K Pritchard
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  High MHC diversity maintained by balancing selection in an otherwise genetically monomorphic mammal.

Authors:  Andres Aguilar; Gary Roemer; Sally Debenham; Matthew Binns; David Garcelon; Robert K Wayne
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2004-02-27       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Possible extinction vortex for a population of Iberian lynx on the verge of extirpation.

Authors:  Francisco Palomares; José Antonio Godoy; José Vicente López-Bao; Alejandro Rodríguez; Severine Roques; Mireia Casas-Marce; Eloy Revilla; Miguel Delibes
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2012-06-25       Impact factor: 6.560

4.  Evidence for last interglacial chronology and environmental change from Southern Europe.

Authors:  Achim Brauer; Judy R M Allen; Jens Mingram; Peter Dulski; Sabine Wulf; Brian Huntley
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-01-03       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  From forest to farmland: pollen-inferred land cover change across Europe using the pseudobiomization approach.

Authors:  Ralph M Fyfe; Jessie Woodbridge; Neil Roberts
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2014-12-03       Impact factor: 10.863

6.  Inference of human population history from individual whole-genome sequences.

Authors:  Heng Li; Richard Durbin
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-07-13       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  The complete genome sequence of a Neanderthal from the Altai Mountains.

Authors:  Kay Prüfer; Fernando Racimo; Nick Patterson; Flora Jay; Sriram Sankararaman; Susanna Sawyer; Anja Heinze; Gabriel Renaud; Peter H Sudmant; Cesare de Filippo; Heng Li; Swapan Mallick; Michael Dannemann; Qiaomei Fu; Martin Kircher; Martin Kuhlwilm; Michael Lachmann; Matthias Meyer; Matthias Ongyerth; Michael Siebauer; Christoph Theunert; Arti Tandon; Priya Moorjani; Joseph Pickrell; James C Mullikin; Samuel H Vohr; Richard E Green; Ines Hellmann; Philip L F Johnson; Hélène Blanche; Howard Cann; Jacob O Kitzman; Jay Shendure; Evan E Eichler; Ed S Lein; Trygve E Bakken; Liubov V Golovanova; Vladimir B Doronichev; Michael V Shunkov; Anatoli P Derevianko; Bence Viola; Montgomery Slatkin; David Reich; Janet Kelso; Svante Pääbo
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-12-18       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  ANGSD: Analysis of Next Generation Sequencing Data.

Authors:  Thorfinn Sand Korneliussen; Anders Albrechtsen; Rasmus Nielsen
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2014-11-25       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  Inferring Bottlenecks from Genome-Wide Samples of Short Sequence Blocks.

Authors:  Lynsey Bunnefeld; Laurent A F Frantz; Konrad Lohse
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2015-09-03       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  Extreme genomic erosion after recurrent demographic bottlenecks in the highly endangered Iberian lynx.

Authors:  Federico Abascal; André Corvelo; Fernando Cruz; José L Villanueva-Cañas; Anna Vlasova; Marina Marcet-Houben; Begoña Martínez-Cruz; Jade Yu Cheng; Pablo Prieto; Víctor Quesada; Javier Quilez; Gang Li; Francisca García; Miriam Rubio-Camarillo; Leonor Frias; Paolo Ribeca; Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez; José M Rodríguez; Francisco Câmara; Ernesto Lowy; Luca Cozzuto; Ionas Erb; Michael L Tress; Jose L Rodriguez-Ales; Jorge Ruiz-Orera; Ferran Reverter; Mireia Casas-Marce; Laura Soriano; Javier R Arango; Sophia Derdak; Beatriz Galán; Julie Blanc; Marta Gut; Belen Lorente-Galdos; Marta Andrés-Nieto; Carlos López-Otín; Alfonso Valencia; Ivo Gut; José L García; Roderic Guigó; William J Murphy; Aurora Ruiz-Herrera; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Guglielmo Roma; Cedric Notredame; Thomas Mailund; M Mar Albà; Toni Gabaldón; Tyler Alioto; José A Godoy
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 13.583

View more
  31 in total

1.  Purging of Strongly Deleterious Mutations Explains Long-Term Persistence and Absence of Inbreeding Depression in Island Foxes.

Authors:  Jacqueline A Robinson; Caitlin Brown; Bernard Y Kim; Kirk E Lohmueller; Robert K Wayne
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 10.834

2.  Small population size and low genomic diversity have no effect on fitness in experimental translocations of a wild fish.

Authors:  M C Yates; E Bowles; D J Fraser
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-11-27       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Phylogeography of ancient and modern brown bears from eastern Eurasia.

Authors:  Anna S Molodtseva; Alexey I Makunin; Valentina V Salomashkina; Ilya G Kichigin; Nadezhda V Vorobieva; Sergey K Vasiliev; Mikhail V Shunkov; Alexey A Tishkin; Sergey P Grushin; Peeter Anijalg; Egle Tammeleht; Marju Keis; Gennady G Boeskorov; Nikolai Mamaev; Innokenty M Okhlopkov; Alexey P Kryukov; Elena A Lyapunova; Marina V Kholodova; Ivan V Seryodkin; Urmas Saarma; Vladimir A Trifonov; Alexander S Graphodatsky
Journal:  Biol J Linn Soc Lond       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 2.138

4.  First core microsatellite panel identification in Apennine brown bears (Ursus arctos marsicanus): a collaborative approach.

Authors:  Erminia Scarpulla; Alessio Boattini; Mario Cozzo; Patrizia Giangregorio; Paolo Ciucci; Nadia Mucci; Ettore Randi; Francesca Davoli
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-08-18       Impact factor: 3.969

5.  Population structure, genomic diversity and demographic history of Komodo dragons inferred from whole-genome sequencing.

Authors:  Alessio Iannucci; Andrea Benazzo; Chiara Natali; Evy Ayu Arida; Moch Samsul Arifin Zein; Tim S Jessop; Giorgio Bertorelle; Claudio Ciofi
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2021-08-30       Impact factor: 6.622

Review 6.  Genetic load: genomic estimates and applications in non-model animals.

Authors:  Giorgio Bertorelle; Francesca Raffini; Hernán E Morales; Cock van Oosterhout; Mirte Bosse; Chiara Bortoluzzi; Alessio Iannucci; Emiliano Trucchi
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2022-02-08       Impact factor: 59.581

7.  Developmental instability and phenotypic evolution in a small and isolated bear population.

Authors:  A Loy; P Ciucci; G Guidarelli; E Roccotelli; P Colangelo
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2021-04-21       Impact factor: 3.703

8.  Cost of Coexisting with a Relict Large Carnivore Population: Impact of Apennine Brown Bears, 2005-2015.

Authors:  Andrea Galluzzi; Valerio Donfrancesco; Gianluca Mastrantonio; Cinzia Sulli; Paolo Ciucci
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-19       Impact factor: 2.752

9.  The genome of the Pyrenean desman and the effects of bottlenecks and inbreeding on the genomic landscape of an endangered species.

Authors:  Lídia Escoda; Jose Castresana
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2021-05-29       Impact factor: 5.183

10.  Gaining insight into the assimilated diet of small bear populations by stable isotope analysis.

Authors:  Giulio Careddu; Paolo Ciucci; Stella Mondovì; Edoardo Calizza; Loreto Rossi; Maria Letizia Costantini
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-07-08       Impact factor: 4.379

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.