Functional genomics analysis reveals the evolutionary adaptation and demographic history of pygmy lorises

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  • Ming Li Li
  • Sheng Wang
  • Penghui Xu
  • Hang Yu Tian
  • Mixue Bai
  • Ya Ping Zhang
  • Yong Shao
  • Zi Jun Xiong
  • Xiao Guang Qi
  • David N. Cooper
  • KU, thw266
  • He Helen Zhu
  • Dong Dong Wu

Lorises are a group of globally threatened strepsirrhine primates that exhibit many unusual physiological and behavioral features, including a low metabolic rate, slow movement, and hibernation. Here, we assembled a chromosome-level genome sequence of the pygmy loris (Xanthonycticebus pygmaeus) and resequenced whole genomes from 50 pygmy lorises and 6 Bengal slow lorises (Nycticebus bengalensis). We found that many gene families involved in detoxification have been specifically expanded in the pygmy loris, including the GSTA gene family, with many newly derived copies functioning specifically in the liver. We detected many genes displaying evolutionary convergence between pygmy loris and koala, including PITRM1. Significant decreases in PITRM1 enzymatic activity in these two species may have contributed to their characteristic low rate of metabolism. We also detected many evolutionarily convergent genes and positively selected genes in the pygmy loris that are involved in muscle development. Functional assays demonstrated the decreased ability of one positively selected gene, MYOF, to up-regulate the fast-type muscle fiber, consistent with the lower proportion of fast-twitch muscle fibers in the pygmy loris. The protein product of another positively selected gene in the pygmy loris, PER2, exhibited weaker binding to the key circadian core protein CRY, a finding that may be related to this species’ unusual circadian rhythm. Finally, population genomics analysis revealed that these two extant loris species, which coexist in the same habitat, have exhibited an inverse relationship in terms of their demography over the past 1 million years, implying strong interspecies competition after speciation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2123030119
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume119
Issue number40
Number of pages10
ISSN0027-8424
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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© 2022 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.

    Research areas

  • adaptive evolution, demographic history, slow lorises

ID: 329193250