AI Article Synopsis

  • CNVs (copy number variants) are important for understanding human evolution, but we lack data on primate CNVs.
  • We conducted genomic hybridizations on bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans to identify and compare CNV locations and frequencies among these species and humans.
  • Our findings reveal different selective pressures in CNVs across lineages, with gorillas showing evidence of purifying selection, while orangutans show signs of positive selection, and bonobos and chimpanzees exhibit relaxed selection due to a past duplication event.

Article Abstract

Copy number variants (CNVs) are increasingly acknowledged as an important source of evolutionary novelties in the human lineage. However, our understanding of their significance is still hindered by the lack of primate CNV data. We performed intraspecific comparative genomic hybridizations to identify loci harboring copy number variants in each of the four great apes: bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. For the first time, we could analyze differences in CNV location and frequency in these four species, and compare them with human CNVs and primate segmental duplication (SD) maps. In addition, for bonobo and gorilla, patterns of CNV and nucleotide diversity were studied in the same individuals. We show that CNVs have been subject to different selective pressures in different lineages. Evidence for purifying selection is stronger in gorilla CNVs overlapping genes, while positive selection appears to have driven the fixation of structural variants in the orangutan lineage. In contrast, chimpanzees and bonobos present high levels of common structural polymorphism, which is indicative of relaxed purifying selection together with the higher mutation rates induced by the known burst of segmental duplication in the ancestor of the African apes. Indeed, the impact of the duplication burst is noticeable by the fact that bonobo and chimpanzee share more CNVs with gorilla than expected. Finally, we identified a number of interesting genomic regions that present high-frequency CNVs in all great apes, while containing only very rare or even pathogenic structural variants in humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3202280PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.117242.110DOI Listing

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