| Literature DB >> 33971056 |
Alisa O Vershinina1, Peter D Heintzman2, Duane G Froese3, Grant Zazula4,5, Molly Cassatt-Johnstone1, Love Dalén6,7, Clio Der Sarkissian8, Shelby G Dunn1, Luca Ermini9, Cristina Gamba9, Pamela Groves10, Joshua D Kapp1, Daniel H Mann10, Andaine Seguin-Orlando8, John Southon11, Mathias Stiller1,12, Matthew J Wooller13,14, Gennady Baryshnikov15, Dmitry Gimranov16,17, Eric Scott18, Elizabeth Hall5, Susan Hewitson5, Irina Kirillova19, Pavel Kosintsev16, Fedor Shidlovsky20, Hao-Wen Tong21,22, Mikhail P Tiunov23, Sergey Vartanyan24, Ludovic Orlando8, Russell Corbett-Detig25, Ross D MacPhee26, Beth Shapiro1,27.
Abstract
The Bering Land Bridge (BLB) last connected Eurasia and North America during the Late Pleistocene. Although the BLB would have enabled transfers of terrestrial biota in both directions, it also acted as an ecological filter whose permeability varied considerably over time. Here we explore the possible impacts of this ecological corridor on genetic diversity within, and connectivity among, populations of a once wide-ranging group, the caballine horses (Equus spp.). Using a panel of 187 mitochondrial and eight nuclear genomes recovered from present-day and extinct caballine horses sampled across the Holarctic, we found that Eurasian horse populations initially diverged from those in North America, their ancestral continent, around 1.0-0.8 million years ago. Subsequent to this split our mitochondrial DNA analysis identified two bidirectional long-range dispersals across the BLB ~875-625 and ~200-50 thousand years ago, during the Middle and Late Pleistocene. Whole genome analysis indicated low levels of gene flow between North American and Eurasian horse populations, which probably occurred as a result of these inferred dispersals. Nonetheless, mitochondrial and nuclear diversity of caballine horse populations retained strong phylogeographical structuring. Our results suggest that barriers to gene flow, currently unidentified but possibly related to habitat distribution across Beringia or ongoing evolutionary divergence, played an important role in shaping the early genetic history of caballine horses, including the ancestors of living horses within Equus ferus.Entities:
Keywords: Bering Land Bridge; Equus ferus; horses; palaeogenomics; population structure
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33971056 DOI: 10.1111/mec.15977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185