Date: December 11, 2014
Source Texas Tech University
Understanding the crocodilian genome can help scientists better understand birds.
The DNA in alligators, crocodiles and gharials is about 93 percent
identical across the genome. By comparison, a human shares about 93
percent of his or her DNA with a macaque.
A Texas Tech University biologist led a team of more than 50 scientists who mapped the genomes of three crocodilians.
By
mapping these genomes, scientists may better understand the evolution
of birds, which are the toothy predators' closest living relatives, said David Ray, an associate professor of biology. The team completed genomes of a crocodile, an alligator and a true gharialto complete the genomic family portrait.
"One
of the major finds in our case was that crocodilian genomes change very
slowly when compared to birds," Ray said. "We compared both birds and
crocodilians to turtles, which are the closest living relatives of the
group that includes both birds and crocodilians. We found that they
evolved slowly also. The best explanation for this is that the common
ancestor of all three was a 'slow evolver,' which in turn suggests that
rapid evolution is something that evolved independently in birds."
Research
began in 2009 as an attempt to map only 1 percent of crocodilian DNA.
However, shortly after starting, the price for mapping a million bases
dropped from $1,000 eventually down to $1.
"We
had proposed to sequence about 2.4 million bases from the three
crocodilians in the original proposal," Ray said. "By the time we got
the funds, it became clear that we could easily accomplish a thousand times that much and could afford to sequence an entire genome of 3 billion bases."
Ray
said that when biologists look at a group of organisms, they look for
what makes that group unique as well as what all members of one group of
organisms share that other groups do not. The best way to do that is to
examine their closest relatives.
"Technically,
birds' closest relatives are the dinosaurs," he said. "So we can only
look at their fossils and this can provide only limited information on
their biology when compared to examining organisms that are alive today.
We get insight into differences in behavior, structures that don't
fossilize, and in our case, the makeup of the genome."
Ray
said he and other scientists were surprised to see how genetically
uniform the alligators that the group sequenced were. Initially, the
group suspected severe hunting during most of the 20th century may be to
blame.
"Because
alligators underwent a severe population decline, we first thought that
might be what happened," he said. "However, we see the same pattern in
all three species and the likelihood that all three were subject to the
same genetic bottlenecks is small. We suggested instead that change just
occurs slowly in crocodilians. In other words, it wasn't that the
genetic differences were reduced because of overhunting. Rather, the
amount of variation in crocodilians is low because change simply occurs
slowly in these genomes."
The
DNA in alligators, crocodiles and gharials is about 93 percent
identical across the genome. By comparison, a human shares about 93
percent of his or her DNA with a macaque.
"The
difference is that humans and macaques shared a common ancestor around
23 million years ago while alligators and crocodiles shared a common
ancestor in the much more distant past, around 90 million years ago," he
said. "That means that things are changing in primate genomes about
four times faster than in crocodilians."
Ed
Green, an assistant professor of biomolecular engineering at University
of California, Santa Cruz, has worked on several mammalian genomes,
including that of Neanderthals. He said he didn't expect such slow
genetic changes seen in these reptiles.
"Crocodilian
genomes are really interesting because they appear to have changed so
little over time," Green said. "From the perspective of someone who
knows a lot about mammalian genomes, reptiles are strange in how static
they are. Crocs and gators are especially static.
"Like
most genome projects, the assembly and annotation is only the
beginning. There is some fascinating biology in Crocodylia like
temperature-dependent sex determination. Male and female crocodilians
are genetically identical, and we'd love to know how that works. We're
also now in the position to start looking hard at the genomes of the
common ancestor of crocs and birds. Not much is known about the biology
of this creature, called an archosaur. But we may hope to learn a lot
about it by reconstructing its genome from the living genomes of its
living descendants, the crocs and birds."
Their
research, largely funded by the National Science Foundation, will
appear Friday (Dec. 12) in the peer-reviewed journal, Science.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by Texas Tech University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- R. E. Green, E. L. Braun, J. Armstrong, D. Earl, N. Nguyen, G. Hickey, M. W. Vandewege, J. A. St. John, S. Capella-Gutierrez, T. A. Castoe, C. Kern, M. K. Fujita, J. C. Opazo, J. Jurka, K. K. Kojima, J. Caballero, R. M. Hubley, A. F. Smit, R. N. Platt, C. A. Lavoie, M. P. Ramakodi, J. W. Finger, A. Suh, S. R. Isberg, L. Miles, A. Y. Chong, W. Jaratlerdsiri, J. Gongora, C. Moran, A. Iriarte, J. McCormack, S. C. Burgess, S. V. Edwards, E. Lyons, C. Williams, M. Breen, J. T. Howard, C. R. Gresham, D. G. Peterson, J. Schmitz, D. D. Pollock, D. Haussler, E. W. Triplett, G. Zhang, N. Irie, E. D. Jarvis, C. A. Brochu, C. J. Schmidt, F. M. McCarthy, B. C. Faircloth, F. G. Hoffmann, T. C. Glenn, T. Gabaldon, B. Paten, D. A. Ray. Three crocodilian genomes reveal ancestral patterns of evolution among archosaurs. Science, 2014; 346 (6215): 1254449 DOI:10.1126/science.1254449
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