학술논문

High-resolution comparative analysis of great ape genomes
Document Type
article
Source
Science. 360(6393)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Stem Cell Research
Human Genome
Biotechnology
Aetiology
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Generic health relevance
Animals
Contig Mapping
Evolution
Molecular
Genetic Variation
Genome
Human
Hominidae
Humans
Molecular Sequence Annotation
Sequence Analysis
DNA
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Genetic studies of human evolution require high-quality contiguous ape genome assemblies that are not guided by the human reference. We coupled long-read sequence assembly and full-length complementary DNA sequencing with a multiplatform scaffolding approach to produce ab initio chimpanzee and orangutan genome assemblies. By comparing these with two long-read de novo human genome assemblies and a gorilla genome assembly, we characterized lineage-specific and shared great ape genetic variation ranging from single- to mega-base pair-sized variants. We identified ~17,000 fixed human-specific structural variants identifying genic and putative regulatory changes that have emerged in humans since divergence from nonhuman apes. Interestingly, these variants are enriched near genes that are down-regulated in human compared to chimpanzee cerebral organoids, particularly in cells analogous to radial glial neural progenitors.