Comparative genomics provides insights into adaptive evolution and demographics of bats

Bats possess a range of distinctive characteristics, including flight, echolocation, impressive longevity, and the ability to harbor various zoonotic pathogens. Additionally, they account for the second-highest species diversity among mammalian orders, yet their phylogenetic relationships and demogr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular biology and evolution 2024-11
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Gaoming, Pan, Qi, Zhu, Pingfen, Guo, Xinyu, Zhang, Zhan, Li, Zihao, Zhang, Yaolei, Zhang, Xiaoxiao, Wang, Jiahao, Liu, Weiqiang, Hu, Chunyan, Yu, Yang, Wang, Xiao, Chen, Weixiao, Li, Meng, Yu, Wenhua, Liu, Xin, Seim, Inge, Fan, Guangyi, Zhou, Xuming
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bats possess a range of distinctive characteristics, including flight, echolocation, impressive longevity, and the ability to harbor various zoonotic pathogens. Additionally, they account for the second-highest species diversity among mammalian orders, yet their phylogenetic relationships and demographic history remain underexplored. Here, we generated de novo assembled genomes for 17 bat species and two of their mammalian relatives (the Amur hedgehog and Chinese mole shrew), with 12 genomes reaching chromosome-level assembly. Comparative genomics and ChIP-seq assays identified newly gained genomic regions in bats potentially linked to the regulation of gene activity and expression. Notably, some antiviral infection related gene under positive selection exhibited the activity of suppressing cancer, evidencing the linkage between virus tolerance and cancer resistance in bats. By integrating published bat genome assemblies, phylogenetic reconstruction established the proximity of noctilionoid bats to vesper bats. Interestingly, we found two distinct patterns of ancient population dynamics in bats and population changes since the last-glacial maximum do not reflect species phylogenetic relationships. These findings enriched our understanding of adaptive mechanisms and demographic history of bats.
ISSN:0737-4038
1537-1719
1537-1719
DOI:10.1093/molbev/msae208