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Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus

BACKGROUND: Previous investigations of phylogeny in Cervus recovered many clades without whole genomic support. METHODS: In this study, the genetic diversity and phylogeny of 5 species (21 subspecies/populations from C. unicolor, C. albirostris, C. nippon, C. elaphus and C. eldii) in the genus Cervu...

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Autores principales: Hu, Pengfei, Shao, Yuanchen, Xu, Jiaping, Wang, Tianjiao, Li, Yiqing, Liu, Huamiao, Rong, Min, Su, Weilin, Chen, Binxi, Cui, Songhuan, Cui, Xuezhe, Yang, Fuhe, Tamate, Hidetoshi, Xing, Xiumei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6525406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31101010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-019-5785-z
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author Hu, Pengfei
Shao, Yuanchen
Xu, Jiaping
Wang, Tianjiao
Li, Yiqing
Liu, Huamiao
Rong, Min
Su, Weilin
Chen, Binxi
Cui, Songhuan
Cui, Xuezhe
Yang, Fuhe
Tamate, Hidetoshi
Xing, Xiumei
author_facet Hu, Pengfei
Shao, Yuanchen
Xu, Jiaping
Wang, Tianjiao
Li, Yiqing
Liu, Huamiao
Rong, Min
Su, Weilin
Chen, Binxi
Cui, Songhuan
Cui, Xuezhe
Yang, Fuhe
Tamate, Hidetoshi
Xing, Xiumei
author_sort Hu, Pengfei
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Previous investigations of phylogeny in Cervus recovered many clades without whole genomic support. METHODS: In this study, the genetic diversity and phylogeny of 5 species (21 subspecies/populations from C. unicolor, C. albirostris, C. nippon, C. elaphus and C. eldii) in the genus Cervus were analyzed using reduced-representation genome sequencing. RESULTS: A total of 197,543 SNPs were identified with an average sequencing depth of 16 x. A total of 21 SNP matrices for each subspecies/population and 1 matrix for individual analysis were constructed, respectively. Nucleotide diversity and heterozygosity analysis showed that all 21 subspecies/populations had different degrees of genetic diversity. C. eldii, C. unicolor and C. albirostris showed relatively high expected and observed heterozygosity, while observed heterozygosity in C. nippon was the lowest, indicating there was a certain degree of inbreeding rate in these subspecies/populations. Phylogenetic ML tree of all Cervus based on the 21 SNP matrices showed 5 robustly supported clades that clearly separate C. eldii, C. unicolor, C. albirostris, C. elaphus and C. nippon. Within C. elaphus clade, 4 subclades were well differentiated and statistically highly supported: C. elaphus (New Zealand), C. e. yarkandensis, C. c. canadensis and the other grouping the rest of C. canadensis from China. In the C. nippon clade, 2 well-distinct subclades corresponding to C. n. aplodontus and other C. nippon populations were separated. Phylogenetic reconstruction indicated that the first evolutionary event of the genus Cervus occurred approximately 7.4 millions of years ago. The split between C. elaphus and C. nippon could be estimated at around 3.6 millions of years ago. Phylogenetic ML tree of all samples based on individual SNP matrices, together with geographic distribution, have shown that there were 3 major subclades of C. elaphus and C. canadensis in China, namely C. e. yarkandensis (distributed in Tarim Basin), C. c. macneilli/C. c. kansuensis/C. c. alashanicus (distributed in middle west of China), and C. c. songaricus/C. c. sibiricus (distributed in northwest of China). Among them, C. e. yarkandensis was molecularly the most primitive subclade, with a differentiation dating back to 0.8–2.2 Myr ago. D statistical analysis showed that there was high probability of interspecific gene exchange between C. albirostris and C. eldii, C. albirostris and C. unicolor, C. nippon and C. unicolor, and there might be 2 migration events among 5 species in the genus Cervus. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provided new insight to the genetic diversity and phylogeny of Cervus deer. In view of the current status of these populations, their conservation category will need to be reassessed. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1186/s12864-019-5785-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-65254062019-05-24 Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus Hu, Pengfei Shao, Yuanchen Xu, Jiaping Wang, Tianjiao Li, Yiqing Liu, Huamiao Rong, Min Su, Weilin Chen, Binxi Cui, Songhuan Cui, Xuezhe Yang, Fuhe Tamate, Hidetoshi Xing, Xiumei BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Previous investigations of phylogeny in Cervus recovered many clades without whole genomic support. METHODS: In this study, the genetic diversity and phylogeny of 5 species (21 subspecies/populations from C. unicolor, C. albirostris, C. nippon, C. elaphus and C. eldii) in the genus Cervus were analyzed using reduced-representation genome sequencing. RESULTS: A total of 197,543 SNPs were identified with an average sequencing depth of 16 x. A total of 21 SNP matrices for each subspecies/population and 1 matrix for individual analysis were constructed, respectively. Nucleotide diversity and heterozygosity analysis showed that all 21 subspecies/populations had different degrees of genetic diversity. C. eldii, C. unicolor and C. albirostris showed relatively high expected and observed heterozygosity, while observed heterozygosity in C. nippon was the lowest, indicating there was a certain degree of inbreeding rate in these subspecies/populations. Phylogenetic ML tree of all Cervus based on the 21 SNP matrices showed 5 robustly supported clades that clearly separate C. eldii, C. unicolor, C. albirostris, C. elaphus and C. nippon. Within C. elaphus clade, 4 subclades were well differentiated and statistically highly supported: C. elaphus (New Zealand), C. e. yarkandensis, C. c. canadensis and the other grouping the rest of C. canadensis from China. In the C. nippon clade, 2 well-distinct subclades corresponding to C. n. aplodontus and other C. nippon populations were separated. Phylogenetic reconstruction indicated that the first evolutionary event of the genus Cervus occurred approximately 7.4 millions of years ago. The split between C. elaphus and C. nippon could be estimated at around 3.6 millions of years ago. Phylogenetic ML tree of all samples based on individual SNP matrices, together with geographic distribution, have shown that there were 3 major subclades of C. elaphus and C. canadensis in China, namely C. e. yarkandensis (distributed in Tarim Basin), C. c. macneilli/C. c. kansuensis/C. c. alashanicus (distributed in middle west of China), and C. c. songaricus/C. c. sibiricus (distributed in northwest of China). Among them, C. e. yarkandensis was molecularly the most primitive subclade, with a differentiation dating back to 0.8–2.2 Myr ago. D statistical analysis showed that there was high probability of interspecific gene exchange between C. albirostris and C. eldii, C. albirostris and C. unicolor, C. nippon and C. unicolor, and there might be 2 migration events among 5 species in the genus Cervus. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provided new insight to the genetic diversity and phylogeny of Cervus deer. In view of the current status of these populations, their conservation category will need to be reassessed. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1186/s12864-019-5785-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. BioMed Central 2019-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6525406/ /pubmed/31101010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-019-5785-z Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hu, Pengfei
Shao, Yuanchen
Xu, Jiaping
Wang, Tianjiao
Li, Yiqing
Liu, Huamiao
Rong, Min
Su, Weilin
Chen, Binxi
Cui, Songhuan
Cui, Xuezhe
Yang, Fuhe
Tamate, Hidetoshi
Xing, Xiumei
Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title_full Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title_fullStr Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title_full_unstemmed Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title_short Genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus Cervus
title_sort genome-wide study on genetic diversity and phylogeny of five species in the genus cervus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6525406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31101010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-019-5785-z
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