| Literature DB >> 31221828 |
Lei Chen1, Qiang Qiu1, Yu Jiang2, Kun Wang1, Zeshan Lin1, Zhipeng Li3, Faysal Bibi4, Yongzhi Yang5, Jinhuan Wang6, Wenhui Nie6, Weiting Su6, Guichun Liu1,7, Qiye Li8, Weiwei Fu2, Xiangyu Pan2, Chang Liu1, Jie Yang1, Chenzhou Zhang1, Yuan Yin1, Yu Wang2, Yue Zhao2, Chen Zhang1, Zhongkai Wang1, Yanli Qin1, Wei Liu7, Bao Wang7, Yandong Ren7, Ru Zhang1, Yan Zeng7, Rute R da Fonseca9,10, Bin Wei2, Ran Li2, Wenting Wan1,7, Ruoping Zhao7, Wenbo Zhu1, Yutao Wang11, Shengchang Duan12, Yun Gao12, Yong E Zhang13,14,15, Chunyan Chen13,14, Christina Hvilsom16, Clinton W Epps17, Leona G Chemnick18, Yang Dong19,20, Siavash Mirarab21, Hans Redlef Siegismund9, Oliver A Ryder18,22, M Thomas P Gilbert23,24, Harris A Lewin25, Guojie Zhang26,8,15,27, Rasmus Heller28, Wen Wang29,7,15.
Abstract
The ruminants are one of the most successful mammalian lineages, exhibiting morphological and habitat diversity and containing several key livestock species. To better understand their evolution, we generated and analyzed de novo assembled genomes of 44 ruminant species, representing all six Ruminantia families. We used these genomes to create a time-calibrated phylogeny to resolve topological controversies, overcoming the challenges of incomplete lineage sorting. Population dynamic analyses show that population declines commenced between 100,000 and 50,000 years ago, which is concomitant with expansion in human populations. We also reveal genes and regulatory elements that possibly contribute to the evolution of the digestive system, cranial appendages, immune system, metabolism, body size, cursorial locomotion, and dentition of the ruminants.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31221828 DOI: 10.1126/science.aav6202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728