Palkopoulou Eleftheria, Mallick Swapan, Skoglund Pontus, Enk Jacob, Rohland Nadin, Li Heng, Omrak Ayça, Vartanyan Sergey, Poinar Hendrik, Götherström Anders, Reich David, Dalén Love
Department of Bioinformatics and Genetics, Swedish Museum of Natural History, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA; Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA; Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Curr Biol. 2015 May 18;25(10):1395-400. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.04.007. Epub 2015 Apr 23.
The processes leading up to species extinctions are typically characterized by prolonged declines in population size and geographic distribution, followed by a phase in which populations are very small and may be subject to intrinsic threats, including loss of genetic diversity and inbreeding. However, whether such genetic factors have had an impact on species prior to their extinction is unclear; examining this would require a detailed reconstruction of a species' demographic history as well as changes in genome-wide diversity leading up to its extinction. Here, we present high-quality complete genome sequences from two woolly mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius). The first mammoth was sequenced at 17.1-fold coverage and dates to ∼4,300 years before present, representing one of the last surviving individuals on Wrangel Island. The second mammoth, sequenced at 11.2-fold coverage, was obtained from an ∼44,800-year-old specimen from the Late Pleistocene population in northeastern Siberia. The demographic trajectories inferred from the two genomes are qualitatively similar and reveal a population bottleneck during the Middle or Early Pleistocene, and a more recent severe decline in the ancestors of the Wrangel mammoth at the end of the last glaciation. A comparison of the two genomes shows that the Wrangel mammoth has a 20% reduction in heterozygosity as well as a 28-fold increase in the fraction of the genome that comprises runs of homozygosity. We conclude that the population on Wrangel Island, which was the last surviving woolly mammoth population, was subject to reduced genetic diversity shortly before it became extinct.
导致物种灭绝的过程通常表现为种群数量和地理分布长期下降,随后进入一个种群规模非常小且可能面临内在威胁的阶段,这些威胁包括遗传多样性丧失和近亲繁殖。然而,这种遗传因素在物种灭绝之前是否对其产生了影响尚不清楚;要研究这一点,需要详细重建一个物种的种群历史以及直至其灭绝时全基因组多样性的变化。在此,我们展示了两只猛犸象(Mammuthus primigenius)的高质量完整基因组序列。第一只猛犸象的测序深度为17.1倍,可追溯到距今约4300年前,它代表了弗兰格尔岛上最后幸存的个体之一。第二只猛犸象的测序深度为11.2倍,是从西伯利亚东北部晚更新世种群中一个距今约44800年的标本中获取的。从这两个基因组推断出的种群动态轨迹在性质上相似,揭示了中更新世或早更新世期间的种群瓶颈,以及在末次冰期结束时弗兰格尔猛犸象祖先近期更为严重的数量下降。对这两个基因组的比较表明,弗兰格尔猛犸象的杂合度降低了20%,并且基因组中纯合子连续区域的比例增加了28倍。我们得出结论,作为最后幸存的猛犸象种群,弗兰格尔岛上的种群在灭绝前不久遗传多样性降低。