4.8 Article

Origins and Long-Term Patterns of Copy-Number Variation in Rhesus Macaques

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 1460-1471

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msaa303

Keywords

copy-number variation; de novo mutation; genomics; rhesus macaque; pedigree sequencing; structural variation

Funding

  1. Precision Health Initiative at Indiana University
  2. NSF [DBI-1564611]

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The study analyzed patterns of CNV mutations in rhesus macaque individuals, finding a low rate of CNV mutations per generation and no correlation between parental age and the number of CNVs passed on to offspring. Rhesus macaques and humans differ in the proportion of segregating deletions, with both species having more segregating deletions than duplications.
Mutations play a key role in the development of disease in an individual and the evolution of traits within species. Recent work in humans and other primates has clarified the origins and patterns of single-nucleotide variants, showing that most arise in the father's germline during spermatogenesis. It remains unknown whether larger mutations, such as deletions and duplications of hundreds or thousands of nucleotides, follow similar patterns. Such mutations lead to copynumber variation (CNV) within and between species, and can have profound effects by deleting or duplicating genes. Here, we analyze patterns of CNV mutations in 32 rhesus macaque individuals from 14 parent-offspring trios. We find the rate of CNV mutations per generation is low (less than one per genome) and we observe no correlation between parental age and the number of CNVs that are passed on to offspring. We also examine segregating CNVs within the rhesus macaque sample and compare them to a similar data set from humans, finding that both species have far more segregating deletions than duplications. We contrast this with long-term patterns of gene copy-number evolution between 17 mammals, where the proportion of deletions that become fixed along the macaque lineage is much smaller than the proportion of segregating deletions. These results suggest purifying selection acting on deletions, such that the majority of them are removed from the population over time. Rhesus macaques are an important biomedical model organism, so these results will aid in our understanding of this species and the disease models it supports.

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