Literature DB >> 31925526

Eight million years of maintained heterozygosity in chromosome homologs of cercopithecine monkeys.

Doron Tolomeo1, Oronzo Capozzi2, Giorgia Chiatante1, Luca Sineo3, Takafumi Ishida4, Nicoletta Archidiacono2, Mariano Rocchi5, Roscoe Stanyon6.   

Abstract

In the Cercopithecini ancestor two chromosomes, homologous to human chromosomes 20 and 21, fused to form the Cercopithecini specific 20/21 association. In some individuals from the genus Cercopithecus, this association was shown to be polymorphic for the position of the centromere, suggesting centromere repositioning events. We set out to test this hypothesis by defining the evolutionary history of the 20/21 association in four Cercopithecini species from three different genera. The marker order of the various 20/21 associations was established using molecular cytogenetic techniques, including an array of more than 100 BACs. We discovered that five different forms of the 20/21 association were present in the four studied Cercopithecini species. Remarkably, in the two Cercopithecus species, we found individuals in which one homolog conserved the ancestral condition, but the other homolog was highly rearranged. The phylogenetic analysis showed that the heterozygosity in these two species originated about 8 million years ago and was maintained for this entire arc of time, surviving multiple speciation events. Our report is a remarkable extension of Dobzhansky's pioneering observation in Drosophila concerning the maintenance of chromosomal heterozygosity due to selective advantage. Dobzhansky's hypothesis recently received strong support in a series of detailed reports on the fruit fly genome. Our findings are first extension to primates, indeed to Old World monkeys phylogenetically close to humans of an analogous situation. Our results have important implications for hypotheses on how chromosome rearrangements, selection, and speciation are related.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chromosomes; Evolution; Heterozygosity; Heterozygous advantage; Primates

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31925526     DOI: 10.1007/s00412-020-00731-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chromosoma        ISSN: 0009-5915            Impact factor:   4.316


  52 in total

Review 1.  Evolutionary molecular cytogenetics of catarrhine primates: past, present and future.

Authors:  R Stanyon; M Rocchi; F Bigoni; N Archidiacono
Journal:  Cytogenet Genome Res       Date:  2012-06-16       Impact factor: 1.636

2.  Evolutionary formation of new centromeres in macaque.

Authors:  Mario Ventura; Francesca Antonacci; Maria Francesca Cardone; Roscoe Stanyon; Pietro D'Addabbo; Angelo Cellamare; L James Sprague; Evan E Eichler; Nicoletta Archidiacono; Mariano Rocchi
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-04-13       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 3.  Evolution of alpha satellite.

Authors:  H F Willard
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  1991-12       Impact factor: 5.578

4.  The evolution of the Cercopithecini: a (post)modern synthesis.

Authors:  Stefania Lo Bianco; Judith C Masters; Luca Sineo
Journal:  Evol Anthropol       Date:  2017-11

5.  How and why chromosome inversions evolve.

Authors:  Mark Kirkpatrick
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2010-09-28       Impact factor: 8.029

Review 6.  Primate chromosome evolution: ancestral karyotypes, marker order and neocentromeres.

Authors:  R Stanyon; M Rocchi; O Capozzi; R Roberto; D Misceo; M Ventura; M F Cardone; F Bigoni; N Archidiacono
Journal:  Chromosome Res       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 5.239

7.  Structural genomic changes underlie alternative reproductive strategies in the ruff (Philomachus pugnax).

Authors:  Sangeet Lamichhaney; Guangyi Fan; Fredrik Widemo; Ulrika Gunnarsson; Doreen Schwochow Thalmann; Marc P Hoeppner; Susanne Kerje; Ulla Gustafson; Chengcheng Shi; He Zhang; Wenbin Chen; Xinming Liang; Leihuan Huang; Jiahao Wang; Enjing Liang; Qiong Wu; Simon Ming-Yuen Lee; Xun Xu; Jacob Höglund; Xin Liu; Leif Andersson
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2015-11-16       Impact factor: 38.330

8.  Geographic patterns of inversion polymorphism in the second chromosome of the cactophilic Drosophila buzzatii from northeastern Argentina.

Authors:  Ignacio M Soto; Eduardo M Soto; Valeria P Carreira; Juan Hurtado; Juan J Fanara; Esteban Hasson
Journal:  J Insect Sci       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.857

9.  Long-read based assembly and synteny analysis of a reference Drosophila subobscura genome reveals signatures of structural evolution driven by inversions recombination-suppression effects.

Authors:  Charikleia Karageorgiou; Víctor Gámez-Visairas; Rosa Tarrío; Francisco Rodríguez-Trelles
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2019-03-18       Impact factor: 3.969

10.  Birth, evolution, and transmission of satellite-free mammalian centromeric domains.

Authors:  Solomon G Nergadze; Francesca M Piras; Riccardo Gamba; Marco Corbo; Federico Cerutti; Joseph G W McCarter; Eleonora Cappelletti; Francesco Gozzo; Rebecca M Harman; Douglas F Antczak; Donald Miller; Maren Scharfe; Giulio Pavesi; Elena Raimondi; Kevin F Sullivan; Elena Giulotto
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2018-04-30       Impact factor: 9.043

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