4.8 Article

Insights into hominid evolution from the gorilla genome sequence

Journal

NATURE
Volume 483, Issue 7388, Pages 169-175

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature10842

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [WT062023, WT089066, WT077192, WT077009, WT077198, 075491/Z/04]
  2. EMBL
  3. Gates Cambridge Trust
  4. MRC
  5. Lundbeck Foundation
  6. Academy of Finlandand the Emil Aaltonen Foundation
  7. Marie Curie fellowship
  8. European Community [StG_20091118]
  9. Spanish Ministry of Education [BES-2010-032251]
  10. BBSRC
  11. UK Medical Research Council
  12. National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health
  13. Danish Council for Independent Research, Natural Sciences [09-062535]
  14. Commonwealth Scholarship
  15. Swiss National Science Foundation
  16. Louis Jeantet Foundation
  17. ERC
  18. EMBO
  19. Hutchinson Whampoa
  20. NHGRI
  21. BIOBASE GmbH
  22. US National Science Foundation [DGE-0739133]
  23. NHGRI [U54 HG003079]
  24. NIH [HG002385]
  25. ICREA Funding Source: Custom
  26. Cancer Research UK [15603] Funding Source: researchfish
  27. Medical Research Council [G0701805, G0501331] Funding Source: researchfish
  28. MRC [G0701805, G0501331] Funding Source: UKRI

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Gorillas are humans' closest living relatives after chimpanzees, and are of comparable importance for the study of human origins and evolution. Here we present the assembly and analysis of a genome sequence for the western lowland gorilla, and compare the whole genomes of all extant great ape genera. We propose a synthesis of genetic and fossil evidence consistent with placing the human-chimpanzee and human-chimpanzee-gorilla speciation events at approximately 6 and 10 million years ago. In 30% of the genome, gorilla is closer to human or chimpanzee than the latter are to each other; this is rarer around coding genes, indicating pervasive selection throughout great ape evolution, and has functional consequences in gene expression. A comparison of protein coding genes reveals approximately 500 genes showing accelerated evolution on each of the gorilla, human and chimpanzee lineages, and evidence for parallel acceleration, particularly of genes involved in hearing. We also compare the western and eastern gorilla species, estimating an average sequence divergence time 1.75 million years ago, but with evidence for more recent genetic exchange and a population bottleneck in the eastern species. The use of the genome sequence in these and future analyses will promote a deeper understanding of great ape biology and evolution.

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