| Literature DB >> 34762458 |
Sree Rohit Raj Kolora1, Gregory L Owens1,2, Juan Manuel Vazquez1, Alexander Stubbs1, Kamalakar Chatla1, Conner Jainese3, Katelin Seeto3, Merit McCrea3, Michael W Sandel4, Juliana A Vianna5, Katherine Maslenikov6, Doris Bachtrog1, James W Orr6, Milton Love3, Peter H Sudmant1,7.
Abstract
Pacific Ocean rockfishes (genus Sebastes) exhibit extreme variation in life span, with some species being among the most long-lived extant vertebrates. We de novo assembled the genomes of 88 rockfish species and from these identified repeated signatures of positive selection in DNA repair pathways in long-lived taxa and 137 longevity-associated genes with direct effects on life span through insulin signaling and with pleiotropic effects through size and environmental adaptations. A genome-wide screen of structural variation reveals copy number expansions in the immune modulatory butyrophilin gene family in long-lived species. The evolution of different rockfish life histories is coupled to genetic diversity and reshapes the mutational spectrum driving segregating CpG→TpG variants in long-lived species. These analyses highlight the genetic innovations that underlie life history trait adaptations and, in turn, how they shape genomic diversity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34762458 PMCID: PMC8923369 DOI: 10.1126/science.abg5332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 63.714