Publications by authors named "Aitor Serres Armero"

Article Synopsis
  • Chronological age is how many years someone has lived, while biological age shows how well their body is functioning, and this can vary even among people of the same age.
  • Scientists are trying to create ways to measure biological age in dogs by studying different dog breeds since they have different lifespans.
  • Research on dogs using special tests called methylation shows that it's challenging to find clear biological age markers, and we need to consider the differences among dog breeds to make better predictions.
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Recent advances in long-read sequencing technologies have allowed the generation and curation of more complete genome assemblies, enabling the analysis of traditionally neglected chromosomes, such as the human Y chromosome (chrY). Native DNA was sequenced on a MinION Oxford Nanopore Technologies sequencing device to generate genome assemblies for seven major chrY human haplogroups. We analyzed and compared the chrY enrichment of sequencing data obtained using two different selective sequencing approaches: adaptive sampling and flow cytometry chromosome sorting.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines how genetic diversity in 240 mammals impacts their resilience and risk of extinction, linking it to historical population sizes.
  • - It finds that species with smaller historical populations tend to have more harmful genetic mutations, increasing their extinction risk.
  • - Genomic data was shown to effectively predict conservation status, indicating its usefulness for assessing extinction risk when ecological information is lacking.
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DNA methylation profiles have been used to develop biomarkers of aging known as epigenetic clocks, which predict chronological age with remarkable accuracy and show promise for inferring health status as an indicator of biological age. Epigenetic clocks were first built to monitor human aging, but their underlying principles appear to be evolutionarily conserved, as they have now been successfully developed for many mammalian species. Here, we describe reliable and highly accurate epigenetic clocks shown to apply to 93 domestic dog breeds.

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Captive breeding programmes represent the most intensive type of ex situ population management for threatened species. One example is the Cuvier's gazelle programme that started in 1975 with only four founding individuals, and after more than four decades of management in captivity, a reintroduction effort was undertaken in Tunisia in 2016, to establish a population in an area historically included within its range. Here, we aim to determine the genetic consequences of this reintroduction event by assessing the genetic diversity of the founder stock as well as of their descendants.

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Extreme phenotypic diversity, a history of artificial selection, and socioeconomic value make domestic dog breeds a compelling subject for genomic research. Copy number variation (CNV) is known to account for a significant part of inter-individual genomic diversity in other systems. However, a comprehensive genome-wide study of structural variation as it relates to breed-specific phenotypes is lacking.

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Article Synopsis
  • Horse domestication had a profound impact on warfare, travel, trade, and language spread.* -
  • The study analyzed DNA from 149 ancient horses, revealing two distinct extinct lineages from Iberia and Siberia that didn't significantly contribute to modern horses.* -
  • The Persian horse lineages gained traction after Islamic conquests, and modern breeding practices have dramatically affected genetic diversity in horses compared to earlier human management.*
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Article Synopsis
  • Mammalian Y chromosomes are often overlooked in genomic studies due to their complexity, leading to the limited characterization of these chromosomes across species.
  • The authors developed a new sequencing method using unamplified flow sorted DNA on a MinION device, resulting in a highly continuous assembly of the first African origin human Y chromosome, improving continuity by over 800%.
  • This innovative approach also enables the detection of epigenetic modifications directly from the nanopore signal and can be applied to simplify the genomic assembly of other species with large and repetitive genomes.
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Background: Whole genome re-sequencing data from dogs and wolves are now commonly used to study how natural and artificial selection have shaped the patterns of genetic diversity. Single nucleotide polymorphisms, microsatellites and variants in mitochondrial DNA have been interrogated for links to specific phenotypes or signals of domestication. However, copy number variation (CNV), despite its increasingly recognized importance as a contributor to phenotypic diversity, has not been extensively explored in canids.

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The chimpanzee is arguably the most important species for the study of human origins. A key resource for these studies is a high-quality reference genome assembly; however, as with most mammalian genomes, the current iteration of the chimpanzee reference genome assembly is highly fragmented. In the current iteration of the chimpanzee reference genome assembly (Pan_tro_2.

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The genomic changes underlying both early and late stages of horse domestication remain largely unknown. We examined the genomes of 14 early domestic horses from the Bronze and Iron Ages, dating to between ~4.1 and 2.

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The gray wolf (Canis lupus) is a widely distributed top predator and ancestor of the domestic dog. To address questions about wolf relationships to each other and dogs, we assembled and analyzed a data set of 34 canine genomes. The divergence between New and Old World wolves is the earliest branching event and is followed by the divergence of Old World wolves and dogs, confirming that the dog was domesticated in the Old World.

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