Hubrecht Institute-KNAW and University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Biomedical Primate Research Center, Rijswijk, the Netherlands.
Nat Neurosci. 2016 Mar;19(3):494-503. doi: 10.1038/nn.4229. Epub 2016 Jan 25.
Although genome sequencing has identified numerous noncoding alterations between primate species, which of those are regulatory and potentially relevant to the evolution of the human brain is unclear. Here we annotated cis-regulatory elements (CREs) in the human, rhesus macaque and chimpanzee genomes using chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (ChIP-seq) in different anatomical regions of the adult brain. We found high similarity in the genomic positioning of rhesus macaque and human CREs, suggesting that the majority of these elements were already present in a common ancestor 25 million years ago. Most of the observed regulatory changes between humans and rhesus macaques occurred before the ancestral separation of humans and chimpanzees, leaving a modest set of regulatory elements with predicted human specificity. Our data refine previous predictions and hypotheses on the consequences of genomic changes between primate species and allow the identification of regulatory alterations relevant to the evolution of the brain.
虽然基因组测序已经在灵长类动物物种之间鉴定出许多非编码改变,但哪些是调节性的,并且可能与人类大脑的进化有关尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用染色质免疫沉淀测序(ChIP-seq)在成年大脑的不同解剖区域注释了人类、恒河猴和黑猩猩基因组中的顺式调控元件(CREs)。我们发现恒河猴和人类 CREs 在基因组定位上具有高度相似性,这表明这些元件中的大多数早在 2500 万年前的共同祖先中就已经存在。在人类和黑猩猩的祖先分离之前,大多数观察到的人类和恒河猴之间的调控变化就已经发生了,这就留下了一小部分具有预测人类特异性的调控元件。我们的数据细化了以前关于灵长类动物物种之间基因组变化后果的预测和假设,并允许鉴定与大脑进化相关的调控变化。