Street Summer L, Kyes Randall C, Grant Richard, Ferguson Betsy
Genetics Research and Informatics Program, Oregon National Primate Research Center, Oregon Health & Sciences University, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2007 Dec 31;8:480. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-8-480.
Macaca fascicularis (cynomolgus or longtail macaques) is the most commonly used non-human primate in biomedical research. Little is known about the genomic variation in cynomolgus macaques or how the sequence variants compare to those of the well-studied related species, Macaca mulatta (rhesus macaque). Previously we identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in portions of 94 rhesus macaque genes and reported that Indian and Chinese rhesus had largely different SNPs. Here we identify SNPs from some of the same genomic regions of cynomolgus macaques (from Indochina, Indonesia, Mauritius and the Philippines) and compare them to the SNPs found in rhesus.
We sequenced a portion of 10 genes in 20 cynomolgus macaques. We identified 69 SNPs in these regions, compared with 71 SNPs found in the same genomic regions of 20 Indian and Chinese rhesus macaques. Thirty six (52%) of the M. fascicularis SNPs were overlapping in both species. The majority (70%) of the SNPs found in both Chinese and Indian rhesus macaque populations were also present in M. fascicularis. Of the SNPs previously found in a single rhesus population, 38% (Indian) and 44% (Chinese) were also identified in cynomolgus macaques. In an alternative approach, we genotyped 100 cynomolgus DNAs using a rhesus macaque SNP array representing 53 genes and found that 51% (29/57) of the rhesus SNPs were present in M. fascicularis. Comparisons of SNP profiles from cynomolgus macaques imported from breeding centers in China (where M. fascicularis are not native) showed they were similar to those from Indochina.
This study demonstrates a surprisingly high conservation of SNPs between M. fascicularis and M. mulatta, suggesting that the relationship of these two species is closer than that suggested by morphological and mitochondrial DNA analysis alone. These findings indicate that SNP discovery efforts in either species will generate useful resources for both macaque species. Identification of SNPs that are unique to regional populations of cynomolgus macaques indicates that location-specific SNPs could be used to distinguish monkeys of uncertain origin. As an example, cynomolgus macaques obtained from 2 different breeding centers in China were shown to have Indochinese ancestry.
食蟹猴(食蟹猕猴或长尾猕猴)是生物医学研究中最常用的非人灵长类动物。对于食蟹猴的基因组变异,或者这些序列变异与已得到充分研究的相关物种恒河猴(猕猴)相比情况如何,我们了解甚少。此前,我们在94个恒河猴基因的部分区域鉴定出单核苷酸多态性(SNP),并报告称印度恒河猴和中国恒河猴的SNP在很大程度上有所不同。在此,我们从食蟹猴(来自印度支那、印度尼西亚、毛里求斯和菲律宾)的一些相同基因组区域鉴定出SNP,并将它们与恒河猴中发现的SNP进行比较。
我们对20只食蟹猴的10个基因的部分区域进行了测序。我们在这些区域鉴定出69个SNP,而在20只印度和中国恒河猴的相同基因组区域中发现了71个SNP。食蟹猴的36个(52%)SNP在两个物种中是重叠的。在中国和印度恒河猴群体中发现的大多数(70%)SNP在食蟹猴中也存在。在之前仅在单个恒河猴群体中发现的SNP中,38%(印度)和44%(中国)也在食蟹猴中被鉴定出来。在另一种方法中,我们使用代表53个基因的恒河猴SNP阵列对100份食蟹猴DNA进行基因分型,发现51%(29/57)的恒河猴SNP在食蟹猴中存在。对从中国繁殖中心进口的食蟹猴(中国并非食蟹猴的原生地)的SNP图谱进行比较,结果显示它们与来自印度支那的食蟹猴相似。
本研究表明食蟹猴和恒河猴之间的SNP具有惊人的高度保守性,这表明这两个物种的关系比仅通过形态学和线粒体DNA分析所表明的更为密切。这些发现表明,在任一物种中进行SNP发现工作都将为两种猕猴物种产生有用的资源。鉴定食蟹猴区域群体特有的SNP表明,特定位置的SNP可用于区分来源不明的猴子。例如,从中国2个不同繁殖中心获得的食蟹猴被证明具有印度支那血统。