@article{424ef3cf38494d77b4b8ae98126cf5c5,
title = "Chromosome size affects sequence divergence between species through the interplay of recombination and selection",
abstract = "The structure of the genome shapes the distribution of genetic diversity and sequence divergence. To investigate how the relationship between chromosome size and recombination rate affects sequence divergence between species, we combined empirical analyses and evolutionary simulations. We estimated pairwise sequence divergence among 15 species from three different mammalian clades—Peromyscus rodents, Mus mice, and great apes—from chromosome-level genome assemblies. We found a strong significant negative correlation between chromosome size and sequence divergence in all species comparisons within the Peromyscus and great apes clades but not the Mus clade, suggesting that the dramatic chromosomal rearrangements among Mus species may have masked the ancestral genomic landscape of divergence in many comparisons. Our evolutionary simulations showed that the main factor determining differences in divergence among chromosomes of different sizes is the interplay of recombination rate and selection, with greater variation in larger populations than in smaller ones. In ancestral populations, shorter chromosomes harbor greater nucleotide diversity. As ancestral populations diverge, diversity present at the onset of the split contributes to greater sequence divergence in shorter chromosomes among daughter species. The combination of empirical data and evolutionary simulations revealed that chromosomal rearrangements, demography, and divergence times may also affect the relationship between chromosome size and divergence, thus deepening our understanding of the role of genome structure in the evolution of species divergence.",
keywords = "genome assembly, genome evolution, great apes, mammal, Mus, Peromyscus",
author = "Anna Tigano and Ruqayya Khan and Omer, {Arina D.} and David Weisz and Olga Dudchenko and Multani, {Asha S.} and Sen Pathak and Behringer, {Richard R.} and Aiden, {Erez L.} and Heidi Fisher and MacManes, {Matthew D.}",
note = "Funding Information: We would like to thank the Museum of Southern Biology for the sample, Tom Booker for helpful feedback on the simulations and a previous version of the manuscript, and the constructive feedback from three anonymous reviewers. All analyses and simulations were performed on the UNH Premise Cluster. This work was funded by the National Institute of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences to M.D.M. (1R35GM128843). Pawsey Supercomputing Centre with funding from the Australian Government and the Government of Western Australia provided computational support for the DNA Zoo assembly effort. E.L.A. was supported by an NSF Physics Frontiers Center Award (PHY1427654), the Welch Foundation (Q‐1866), a USDA Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Grant (2017‐05741), and an NIH Encyclopedia of DNA Elements Mapping Center Award (UM1HG009375). The DNA Zoo sequencing effort is supported by Illumina, Inc. P. nasutus Funding Information: We would like to thank the Museum of Southern Biology for the P. nasutus sample, Tom Booker for helpful feedback on the simulations and a previous version of the manuscript, and the constructive feedback from three anonymous reviewers. All analyses and simulations were performed on the UNH Premise Cluster. This work was funded by the National Institute of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences to M.D.M. (1R35GM128843). Pawsey Supercomputing Centre with funding from the Australian Government and the Government of Western Australia provided computational support for the DNA Zoo assembly effort. E.L.A. was supported by an NSF Physics Frontiers Center Award (PHY1427654), the Welch Foundation (Q-1866), a USDA Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Grant (2017-05741), and an NIH Encyclopedia of DNA Elements Mapping Center Award (UM1HG009375). The DNA Zoo sequencing effort is supported by Illumina, Inc. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Evolution published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Society for the Study of Evolution.",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1111/evo.14467",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "76",
pages = "782--798",
journal = "Evolution; international journal of organic evolution",
issn = "0014-3820",
publisher = "Society for the Study of Evolution",
number = "4",
}