McArthur Evonne, Rinker David C, Cheng Yang, Wang Qixuan, Wang Juan, Gilbertson Erin N, Fudenberg Geoff, Pittman Maureen, Keough Kathleen, Yue Feng, Pollard Katherine S, Capra John A
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Vanderbilt Genetics Institute, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.
bioRxiv. 2025 Sep 2:2022.02.07.479462. doi: 10.1101/2022.02.07.479462.
Changes in gene regulation were a major driver of the divergence of archaic hominins (AHs)-Neanderthals and Denisovans-and modern humans (MHs). The three-dimensional (3D) folding of the genome is critical for regulating gene expression; however, its role in recent human evolution has not been explored because the degradation of ancient samples does not permit experimental determination of AH 3D genome folding. To fill this gap, we apply novel deep learning methods for inferring 3D genome organization from DNA sequence to Neanderthal, Denisovan, and diverse MH genomes. Using the resulting 3D contact maps across the genome, we identify 167 distinct regions with diverged 3D genome organization between AHs and MHs. We show that these 3D-diverged loci are enriched for genes related to the function and morphology of the eye, supra-orbital ridges, hair, lungs, immune response, and cognition. Despite these specific diverged loci, the 3D genome of AHs and MHs is more similar than expected based on sequence divergence, suggesting that the pressure to maintain 3D genome organization constrained hominin sequence evolution. We also find that 3D genome organization constrained the landscape of AH ancestry in MHs today: regions more tolerant of 3D variation are enriched for introgression in modern Eurasians. Finally, we identify loci where modern Eurasians have inherited novel 3D genome folding patterns from AH ancestors and validate folding differences in a high-frequency locus using Hi-C, revealing a putative molecular mechanism for phenotypes associated with archaic introgression. In summary, our application of deep learning to predict archaic 3D genome organization illustrates the potential of inferring molecular phenotypes from ancient DNA to reveal previously unobservable biological differences.
基因调控的变化是古代人类(AHs)——尼安德特人和丹尼索瓦人——与现代人类(MHs)分化的主要驱动力。基因组的三维(3D)折叠对于调控基因表达至关重要;然而,由于古代样本的降解不允许对AH的3D基因组折叠进行实验测定,其在近期人类进化中的作用尚未得到探索。为了填补这一空白,我们应用新颖的深度学习方法,从DNA序列推断尼安德特人、丹尼索瓦人和多种MH基因组的3D基因组组织。利用全基因组所得的3D接触图谱,我们识别出AHs和MHs之间3D基因组组织存在差异的167个不同区域。我们发现,这些3D差异位点富含与眼睛、眶上嵴、毛发、肺、免疫反应和认知功能及形态相关的基因。尽管存在这些特定的差异位点,但基于序列差异,AHs和MHs的3D基因组比预期的更相似,这表明维持3D基因组组织的压力限制了人类的序列进化。我们还发现,3D基因组组织限制了当今MHs中AH祖先血统的分布格局:对3D变异耐受性更高的区域在现代欧亚人中的基因渗入更为丰富。最后,我们识别出现代欧亚人从AH祖先那里继承了新型3D基因组折叠模式的位点,并使用Hi-C验证了一个高频位点的折叠差异,揭示了与古代基因渗入相关表型的一种推定分子机制。总之,我们应用深度学习预测古代3D基因组组织,说明了从古代DNA推断分子表型以揭示先前不可观察到的生物学差异的潜力。