Great ape Y Chromosome and mitochondrial DNA phylogenies reflect subspecies structure and patterns of mating and dispersal

The distribution of genetic diversity in great ape species is likely to have been affected by patterns of dispersal and mating. This has previously been investigated by sequencing autosomal and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), but large-scale sequence analysis of the male-specific region of the Y Chromosome (MSY) has not yet been undertaken. Here, we use the human MSY reference sequence as a basis for sequence capture and read mapping in 19 great ape males, combining the data with sequences extracted from the published whole genomes of 24 additional males to yield a total sample of 19 chimpanzees, four bonobos, 14 gorillas, and six orangutans, in which interpretable MSY sequence ranges from 2.61 to 3.80 Mb. This analysis reveals thousands of novel MSY variants and defines unbiased phylogenies. We compare these with mtDNA-based trees in the same individuals, estimating time-to-most-recent common ancestor (TMRCA) for key nodes in both cases. The two loci show high topological concordance and are consistent with accepted (sub)species definitions, but time depths differ enormously between loci and (sub)species, likely reflecting different dispersal and mating patterns. Gorillas and chimpanzees/bonobos present generally low and high MSY diversity, respectively, reflecting polygyny versus multimale–multifemale mating. However, particularly marked differences exist among chimpanzee subspecies: The western chimpanzee MSY phylogeny has a TMRCA of only 13.2 (10.8–15.8) thousand years, but that for central chimpanzees exceeds 1 million years. Cross-species comparison within a single MSY phylogeny emphasizes the low human diversity, and reveals species-specific branch length variation that may reflect differences in long-term generation times.

[1]  J. Kidd,et al.  Inferring chimpanzee Y chromosome history and amplicon diversity from whole genome sequencing , 2015 .

[2]  Natalie M. Myres,et al.  Regional Differences in the Accumulation of SNPs on the Male-Specific Portion of the Human Y Chromosome Replicate Autosomal Patterns: Implications for Genetic Dating , 2015, PloS one.

[3]  M. Jobling,et al.  Large-scale recent expansion of European patrilineages shown by population resequencing , 2015, Nature Communications.

[4]  August E. Woerner,et al.  Extreme selective sweeps independently targeted the X chromosomes of the great apes , 2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[5]  Valdis B. Guðmundsdóttir,et al.  The Y-chromosome point mutation rate in humans , 2015, Nature Genetics.

[6]  Peter H. Sudmant,et al.  Mountain gorilla genomes reveal the impact of long-term population decline and inbreeding , 2015, Science.

[7]  Michael C. Westaway,et al.  A recent bottleneck of Y chromosome diversity coincides with a global change in culture , 2015, Genome research.

[8]  August E. Woerner,et al.  Inference of Gorilla Demographic and Selective History from Whole-Genome Sequence Data , 2015, Molecular biology and evolution.

[9]  Chiara Batini,et al.  The Y-Chromosome Tree Bursts into Leaf: 13,000 High-Confidence SNPs Covering the Majority of Known Clades , 2014, Molecular biology and evolution.

[10]  M. Jensen-Seaman,et al.  Complete mitochondrial genome sequence of the Eastern gorilla (Gorilla beringei) and implications for african ape biogeography. , 2014, The Journal of heredity.

[11]  H. Kühl,et al.  The genetic population structure of wild western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) living in continuous rain forest , 2014, American journal of primatology.

[12]  Anders Larsson,et al.  AliView: a fast and lightweight alignment viewer and editor for large datasets , 2014, Bioinform..

[13]  Gil McVean,et al.  Strong male bias drives germline mutation in chimpanzees , 2014, Science.

[14]  H. Kaessmann,et al.  Origins and functional evolution of Y chromosomes across mammals , 2014, Nature.

[15]  Kevin E. Langergraber,et al.  How old are chimpanzee communities? Time to the most recent common ancestor of the Y-chromosome in highly patrilocal societies. , 2014, Journal of human evolution.

[16]  Jennifer F. Hughes,et al.  Mammalian Y chromosomes retain widely expressed dosage-sensitive regulators , 2014, Nature.

[17]  R Core Team,et al.  R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .

[18]  C. Tyler-Smith,et al.  A comparison of Y-chromosomal lineage dating using either resequencing or Y-SNP plus Y-STR genotyping☆ , 2013, Forensic science international. Genetics.

[19]  André L. Martins,et al.  Population Genomic Analysis Reveals a Rich Speciation and Demographic History of Orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus and Pongo abelii) , 2013, PloS one.

[20]  Shun Hongo,et al.  Male genetic structure and paternity in western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). , 2013, American journal of physical anthropology.

[21]  Arcadi Navarro,et al.  Great ape genetic diversity and population history , 2013, Nature.

[22]  Rodrigo Lopez,et al.  Analysis Tool Web Services from the EMBL-EBI , 2013, Nucleic Acids Res..

[23]  H. Siegismund,et al.  Contrasting demographic histories of the neighboring bonobo and chimpanzee , 2013, Primates.

[24]  G. Fredriksson,et al.  Marked population structure and recent migration in the critically endangered Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii). , 2013, The Journal of heredity.

[25]  Anders E. Halager,et al.  A New Isolation with Migration Model along Complete Genomes Infers Very Different Divergence Processes among Closely Related Great Ape Species , 2012, PLoS genetics.

[26]  Kevin E. Langergraber,et al.  Generation times in wild chimpanzees and gorillas suggest earlier divergence times in great ape and human evolution , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[27]  B. Goossens,et al.  Heavily male‐biased long‐distance dispersal of orang‐utans (genus: Pongo), as revealed by Y‐chromosomal and mitochondrial genetic markers , 2012, Molecular ecology.

[28]  Sergey Koren,et al.  The bonobo genome compared with the chimpanzee and human genomes , 2012, Nature.

[29]  Albert J. Vilella,et al.  Insights into hominid evolution from the gorilla genome sequence , 2012, Nature.

[30]  Steve Rozen,et al.  Strict evolutionary conservation followed rapid gene loss on human and rhesus Y chromosomes , 2012, Nature.

[31]  D. Higgins,et al.  Fast, scalable generation of high-quality protein multiple sequence alignments using Clustal Omega , 2011, Molecular systems biology.

[32]  M. Pagel,et al.  DO VARIATIONS IN SUBSTITUTION RATES AND MALE MUTATION BIAS CORRELATE WITH LIFE‐HISTORY TRAITS? A STUDY OF 32 MAMMALIAN GENOMES , 2011, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[33]  M. Nei,et al.  MEGA5: molecular evolutionary genetics analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods. , 2011, Molecular biology and evolution.

[34]  B. Goossens,et al.  Sex-biased dispersal and volcanic activities shaped phylogeographic patterns of extant Orangutans (genus: Pongo). , 2011, Molecular biology and evolution.

[35]  Colin J. Stoneking,et al.  Male-Mediated Gene Flow in Patrilocal Primates , 2011, PloS one.

[36]  Kenneth Lange,et al.  Enhancements to the ADMIXTURE algorithm for individual ancestry estimation , 2011, BMC Bioinformatics.

[37]  Gonçalo R. Abecasis,et al.  The variant call format and VCFtools , 2011, Bioinform..

[38]  Martin Goodson,et al.  Stampy: a statistical algorithm for sensitive and fast mapping of Illumina sequence reads. , 2011, Genome research.

[39]  M. DePristo,et al.  A framework for variation discovery and genotyping using next-generation DNA sequencing data , 2011, Nature Genetics.

[40]  D. Behar,et al.  Insights into the demographic history of African Pygmies from complete mitochondrial genomes. , 2011, Molecular biology and evolution.

[41]  Albert J. Vilella,et al.  Comparative and demographic analysis of orang-utan genomes , 2011, Nature.

[42]  J. Lupski,et al.  Structural variation of the human genome: mechanisms, assays, and role in male infertility , 2011, Systems biology in reproductive medicine.

[43]  B. Hahn,et al.  Evolutionary history of chimpanzees inferred from complete mitochondrial genomes. , 2011, Molecular biology and evolution.

[44]  Nadja V Morf,et al.  Effects of Pleistocene glaciations and rivers on the population structure of Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[45]  Josyf Mychaleckyj,et al.  Robust relationship inference in genome-wide association studies , 2010, Bioinform..

[46]  Laura S. Kubatko,et al.  More reliable estimates of divergence times in Pan using complete mtDNA sequences and accounting for population structure , 2010, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[47]  Christian E Elger,et al.  Distinct patterns of mitochondrial genome diversity in bonobos (Pan paniscus) and humans , 2010, BMC Evolutionary Biology.

[48]  C. Münch,et al.  Y Chromosomal Variation Tracks the Evolution of Mating Systems in Chimpanzee and Bonobo , 2010, PloS one.

[49]  M. Krützen,et al.  A multiplex-system to target 16 male-specific and 15 autosomal genetic markers for orang-utans (genus: Pongo) , 2010, Conservation Genetics Resources.

[50]  Rodrigo Lopez,et al.  A new bioinformatics analysis tools framework at EMBL–EBI , 2010, Nucleic Acids Res..

[51]  L. Excoffier,et al.  Arlequin suite ver 3.5: a new series of programs to perform population genetics analyses under Linux and Windows , 2010, Molecular ecology resources.

[52]  Steve Rozen,et al.  Chimpanzee and human Y chromosomes are remarkably divergent in structure and gene content , 2010, Nature.

[53]  Yun S. Song,et al.  BayesCall: A model-based base-calling algorithm for high-throughput short-read sequencing. , 2009, Genome research.

[54]  David H. Alexander,et al.  Fast model-based estimation of ancestry in unrelated individuals. , 2009, Genome research.

[55]  Arne Röhl,et al.  Correcting for purifying selection: an improved human mitochondrial molecular clock. , 2009, American journal of human genetics.

[56]  Gonçalo R. Abecasis,et al.  The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools , 2009, Bioinform..

[57]  W. Schempp,et al.  Simian Y Chromosomes: species-specific rearrangements of DAZ, RBM, and TSPY versus contiguity of PAR and SRY , 1998, Mammalian Genome.

[58]  A. Rambaut,et al.  BEAST: Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees , 2007, BMC Evolutionary Biology.

[59]  A. Harcourt,et al.  Gorilla society: What we know and don't know , 2007 .

[60]  E. Petit,et al.  Sex‐biased dispersal in western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) , 2007, Molecular ecology.

[61]  David Reich,et al.  Genetic Structure of Chimpanzee Populations , 2007, PLoS genetics.

[62]  Roland A H van Oorschot,et al.  Structural variation on the short arm of the human Y chromosome: recurrent multigene deletions encompassing Amelogenin Y. , 2007, Human molecular genetics.

[63]  G. Perry,et al.  The evolutionary history of human and chimpanzee Y-chromosome gene loss. , 2006, Molecular biology and evolution.

[64]  B. Nickel,et al.  Demographic History and Genetic Differentiation in Apes , 2006, Current Biology.

[65]  C. Boesch,et al.  Y‐chromosome analysis confirms highly sex‐biased dispersal and suggests a low male effective population size in bonobos (Pan paniscus) , 2006, Molecular ecology.

[66]  Jack N. Fenner,et al.  Cross-cultural estimation of the human generation interval for use in genetics-based population divergence studies. , 2005, American journal of physical anthropology.

[67]  O. Pybus,et al.  Bayesian coalescent inference of past population dynamics from molecular sequences. , 2005, Molecular biology and evolution.

[68]  M. Stoneking,et al.  Development of Y‐chromosomal microsatellite markers for nonhuman primates , 2004, Molecular ecology.

[69]  S. Pääbo,et al.  Unreliable mtDNA data due to nuclear insertions: a cautionary tale from analysis of humans and other great apes , 2004, Molecular ecology.

[70]  Chris Tyler-Smith,et al.  The human Y chromosome: an evolutionary marker comes of age , 2003, Nature Reviews Genetics.

[71]  T. Graves,et al.  The male-specific region of the human Y chromosome is a mosaic of discrete sequence classes , 2003, Nature.

[72]  V. Eisenmann,et al.  Geology and palaeontology of the Upper Miocene Toros-Menalla hominid locality, Chad , 2002, Nature.

[73]  Adoum H. Mahamat,et al.  A new hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa , 2002, Nature.

[74]  M. Hammer,et al.  High levels of Y-chromosome nucleotide diversity in the genus Pan , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[75]  C. V. van Schaik,et al.  The behavioral ecology and conservation of the orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus): A tale of two islands , 2000 .

[76]  J. F. Storz Genetic Consequences of Mammalian Social Structure , 1999 .

[77]  U. Dieckmann,et al.  The evolutionary ecology of dispersal , 1999 .

[78]  A. Dixson Primate Sexuality: Comparative Studies of the Prosimians, Monkeys, Apes, and Humans , 1998 .

[79]  N. Archidiacono,et al.  Evolution of chromosome Y in primates. , 1997, European journal of histochemistry : EJH.

[80]  J. Yunis,et al.  The origin of man: a chromosomal pictorial legacy. , 1982, Science.

[81]  W. Willis,et al.  The Origin of Man : A Chromosomal Pictorial Legacy , 2014 .