Worldwide patterns of genomic variation and admixture in gray wolves

Author:

Fan Zhenxin,Silva Pedro,Gronau Ilan,Wang Shuoguo,Armero Aitor Serres,Schweizer Rena M.,Ramirez Oscar,Pollinger John,Galaverni Marco,Ortega Del-Vecchyo Diego,Du Lianming,Zhang Wenping,Zhang Zhihe,Xing Jinchuan,Vilà Carles,Marques-Bonet Tomas,Godinho Raquel,Yue Bisong,Wayne Robert K.

Abstract

The gray wolf (Canis lupus) is a widely distributed top predator and ancestor of the domestic dog. To address questions about wolf relationships to each other and dogs, we assembled and analyzed a data set of 34 canine genomes. The divergence between New and Old World wolves is the earliest branching event and is followed by the divergence of Old World wolves and dogs, confirming that the dog was domesticated in the Old World. However, no single wolf population is more closely related to dogs, supporting the hypothesis that dogs were derived from an extinct wolf population. All extant wolves have a surprisingly recent common ancestry and experienced a dramatic population decline beginning at least ∼30 thousand years ago (kya). We suggest this crisis was related to the colonization of Eurasia by modern human hunter–gatherers, who competed with wolves for limited prey but also domesticated them, leading to a compensatory population expansion of dogs. We found extensive admixture between dogs and wolves, with up to 25% of Eurasian wolf genomes showing signs of dog ancestry. Dogs have influenced the recent history of wolves through admixture and vice versa, potentially enhancing adaptation. Simple scenarios of dog domestication are confounded by admixture, and studies that do not take admixture into account with specific demographic models are problematic.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Key Technology R&D Program of China

ICREA

EMBO

MICINN

National Human Genome Research Institute

UC MEXUS-CONACYT

Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding Research Foundation

PRIC from Fundació Barcelona Zoo

Ajuntament de Barcelona

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics

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