The Australasian dingo archetype: de novo chromosome-length genome assembly, DNA methylome, and cranial morphology

Author:

Ballard J William O12ORCID,Field Matt A34ORCID,Edwards Richard J5ORCID,Wilson Laura A B67ORCID,Koungoulos Loukas G8ORCID,Rosen Benjamin D9ORCID,Chernoff Barry10ORCID,Dudchenko Olga1112ORCID,Omer Arina12ORCID,Keilwagen Jens13ORCID,Skvortsova Ksenia14ORCID,Bogdanovic Ozren14ORCID,Chan Eva1415ORCID,Zammit Robert16ORCID,Hayes Vanessa1417ORCID,Aiden Erez Lieberman11121819ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biosciences, University of Melbourne , Royal Parade, Parkville, Victoria 3052 , Australia

2. Department of Environment and Genetics, SABE, La Trobe University , Melbourne, Victoria 3086 , Australia

3. Centre for Tropical Bioinformatics and Molecular Biology, College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Science, James Cook University , Cairns, Queensland 4870 , Australia

4. Immunogenomics Lab, Garvan Institute of Medical Research , Darlinghurst, NSW 2010 , Australia

5. School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, University of New South Wales , Sydney, NSW 2052 , Australia

6. School of Archaeology and Anthropology, The Australian National University , Acton, ACT 2600 , Australia

7. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales , Sydney, NSW 2052 , Australia

8. Department of Archaeology, School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, the University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW 2006 , Australia

9. Animal Genomics and Improvement Laboratory , Agricultural Research Service USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705 , USA

10. College of the Environment, Departments of Biology, and Earth & Environmental Sciences, Wesleyan University , Middletown, CT 06459 , USA

11. The Center for Genome Architecture, Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

12. Center for Theoretical and Biological Physics, Rice University , Houston, TX 77005 , USA

13. Institute for Biosafety in Plant Biotechnology, Julius Kühn-Institut , Quedlinburg 06484 , Germany

14. Developmental Epigenomics Lab, Garvan Institute of Medical Research , Darlinghurst, NSW , Australia

15. Statewide Genomics, New South Wales Health Pathology , Newcastle, NSW 2300 , Australia

16. Vineyard Veterinary Hospital ,Vineyard, NSW 2765, Australia

17. Charles Perkins Centre, Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Sydney , Camperdown, NSW 2006 , Australia

18. UWA School of Agriculture and Environment, The University of Western Australia , Perth, WA 6009 , Australia

19. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard , Cambridge, MA 02142 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background One difficulty in testing the hypothesis that the Australasian dingo is a functional intermediate between wild wolves and domesticated breed dogs is that there is no reference specimen. Here we link a high-quality de novo long-read chromosomal assembly with epigenetic footprints and morphology to describe the Alpine dingo female named Cooinda. It was critical to establish an Alpine dingo reference because this ecotype occurs throughout coastal eastern Australia where the first drawings and descriptions were completed. Findings We generated a high-quality chromosome-level reference genome assembly (Canfam_ADS) using a combination of Pacific Bioscience, Oxford Nanopore, 10X Genomics, Bionano, and Hi-C technologies. Compared to the previously published Desert dingo assembly, there are large structural rearrangements on chromosomes 11, 16, 25, and 26. Phylogenetic analyses of chromosomal data from Cooinda the Alpine dingo and 9 previously published de novo canine assemblies show dingoes are monophyletic and basal to domestic dogs. Network analyses show that the mitochondrial DNA genome clusters within the southeastern lineage, as expected for an Alpine dingo. Comparison of regulatory regions identified 2 differentially methylated regions within glucagon receptor GCGR and histone deacetylase HDAC4 genes that are unmethylated in the Alpine dingo genome but hypermethylated in the Desert dingo. Morphologic data, comprising geometric morphometric assessment of cranial morphology, place dingo Cooinda within population-level variation for Alpine dingoes. Magnetic resonance imaging of brain tissue shows she had a larger cranial capacity than a similar-sized domestic dog. Conclusions These combined data support the hypothesis that the dingo Cooinda fits the spectrum of genetic and morphologic characteristics typical of the Alpine ecotype. We propose that she be considered the archetype specimen for future research investigating the evolutionary history, morphology, physiology, and ecology of dingoes. The female has been taxidermically prepared and is now at the Australian Museum, Sydney.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

Welch Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics

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