Ancient and Modern Genomes Reveal Microsatellites Maintain a Dynamic Equilibrium Through Deep Time

Author:

McComish Bennet J12ORCID,Charleston Michael A1ORCID,Parks Matthew34,Baroni Carlo56ORCID,Salvatore Maria Cristina56ORCID,Li Ruiqiang7,Zhang Guojie89,Millar Craig D10,Holland Barbara R1ORCID,Lambert David M3

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Sciences, University of Tasmania , Hobart, TAS 7001 , Australia

2. Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania , Hobart, TAS 7001 , Australia

3. Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, Griffith University , Nathan, QLD 4111 , Australia

4. Department of Biology, University of Central Oklahoma , Edmond, OK 73034 , USA

5. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, University of Pisa , Pisa, Italy

6. CNR-IGG, Institute of Geosciences and Earth Resources , Pisa , Italy

7. Novogene Bioinformatics Technology Co. Ltd. , Beijing 100083 , China

8. China National GeneBank, BGI-Shenzhen , Shenzhen 518083 , China

9. Department of Biology, Centre for Social Evolution, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen DK-2100 , Denmark

10. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract Microsatellites are widely used in population genetics, but their evolutionary dynamics remain poorly understood. It is unclear whether microsatellite loci drift in length over time. This is important because the mutation processes that underlie these important genetic markers are central to the evolutionary models that employ microsatellites. We identify more than 27 million microsatellites using a novel and unique dataset of modern and ancient Adélie penguin genomes along with data from 63 published chordate genomes. We investigate microsatellite evolutionary dynamics over 2 timescales: one based on Adélie penguin samples dating to ∼46.5 ka and the other dating to the diversification of chordates aged more than 500 Ma. We show that the process of microsatellite allele length evolution is at dynamic equilibrium; while there is length polymorphism among individuals, the length distribution for a given locus remains stable. Many microsatellites persist over very long timescales, particularly in exons and regulatory sequences. These often retain length variability, suggesting that they may play a role in maintaining phenotypic variation within populations.

Funder

Human Frontier Science Program

Australian Research Council Linkage

Australia–India Strategic Research Fund

Griffith University

University of Tasmania

Italian National Program on Antarctic Research

Antarctica New Zealand

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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