Two Antarctic penguin genomes reveal insights into their evolutionary history and molecular changes related to the Antarctic environment

View/ Open
Author(s)
Li, Cai
Zhang, Yong
Li, Jianwen
Kong, Lesheng
Hu, Haofu
Pan, Hailin
Xu, Luohao
Deng, Yuan
Li, Qiye
Jin, Lijun
Yu, Hao
Chen, Yan
Liu, Binghang
Yang, Linfeng
Liu, Shiping
Zhang, Yan
Lang, Yongshan
Xia, Jinquan
He, Weiming
Shi, Qiong
Subramanian, Sankar
Millar, Craig D
Meader, Stephen
Rands, Chris M
Fujita, Matthew K
Greenwold, Matthew J
Castoe, Todd A
Pollock, David D
Gu, Wanjun
Nam, Kiwoong
Ellegren, Hans
Ho, Simon YW
Burt, David W
Ponting, Chris P
Jarvis, Erich D
Gilbert, M Thomas P
Yang, Huanming
Wang, Jian
Lambert, David M
Wang, Jun
Zhang, Guojie
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2014
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background Penguins are flightless aquatic birds widely distributed in the Southern Hemisphere. The distinctive morphological and physiological features of penguins allow them to live an aquatic life, and some of them have successfully adapted to the hostile environments in Antarctica. To study the phylogenetic and population history of penguins and the molecular basis of their adaptations to Antarctica, we sequenced the genomes of the two Antarctic dwelling penguin species, the Ad鬩e penguin [Pygoscelis adeliae] and emperor penguin [Aptenodytes forsteri]. Results Phylogenetic dating suggests that early penguins arose ~60 ...
View more >Background Penguins are flightless aquatic birds widely distributed in the Southern Hemisphere. The distinctive morphological and physiological features of penguins allow them to live an aquatic life, and some of them have successfully adapted to the hostile environments in Antarctica. To study the phylogenetic and population history of penguins and the molecular basis of their adaptations to Antarctica, we sequenced the genomes of the two Antarctic dwelling penguin species, the Ad鬩e penguin [Pygoscelis adeliae] and emperor penguin [Aptenodytes forsteri]. Results Phylogenetic dating suggests that early penguins arose ~60 million years ago, coinciding with a period of global warming. Analysis of effective population sizes reveals that the two penguin species experienced population expansions from ~1 million years ago to ~100 thousand years ago, but responded differently to the climatic cooling of the last glacial period. Comparative genomic analyses with other available avian genomes identified molecular changes in genes related to epidermal structure, phototransduction, lipid metabolism, and forelimb morphology. Conclusions Our sequencing and initial analyses of the first two penguin genomes provide insights into the timing of penguin origin, fluctuations in effective population sizes of the two penguin species over the past 10 million years, and the potential associations between these biological patterns and global climate change. The molecular changes compared with other avian genomes reflect both shared and diverse adaptations of the two penguin species to the Antarctic environment.
View less >
View more >Background Penguins are flightless aquatic birds widely distributed in the Southern Hemisphere. The distinctive morphological and physiological features of penguins allow them to live an aquatic life, and some of them have successfully adapted to the hostile environments in Antarctica. To study the phylogenetic and population history of penguins and the molecular basis of their adaptations to Antarctica, we sequenced the genomes of the two Antarctic dwelling penguin species, the Ad鬩e penguin [Pygoscelis adeliae] and emperor penguin [Aptenodytes forsteri]. Results Phylogenetic dating suggests that early penguins arose ~60 million years ago, coinciding with a period of global warming. Analysis of effective population sizes reveals that the two penguin species experienced population expansions from ~1 million years ago to ~100 thousand years ago, but responded differently to the climatic cooling of the last glacial period. Comparative genomic analyses with other available avian genomes identified molecular changes in genes related to epidermal structure, phototransduction, lipid metabolism, and forelimb morphology. Conclusions Our sequencing and initial analyses of the first two penguin genomes provide insights into the timing of penguin origin, fluctuations in effective population sizes of the two penguin species over the past 10 million years, and the potential associations between these biological patterns and global climate change. The molecular changes compared with other avian genomes reflect both shared and diverse adaptations of the two penguin species to the Antarctic environment.
View less >
Journal Title
GigaScience
Volume
3
Copyright Statement
© 2014 Li et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Subject
Phylogeny and comparative analysis