Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes

DNA from archaeological, paleontological, and museum samples (ancient, or aDNA) provides a unique opportunity to trace eco-evolutionary history of populations affected by environmental shifts on geological time scale. Yet it is still unclear how climate-driven environmental change and biogeographica...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vershinina, Alisa
Other Authors: Shapiro, Beth
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2dn2j38w
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record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Genetics
Evolution & development
Biology
ancient DNA
equids
Equus
population genetics
spellingShingle Genetics
Evolution & development
Biology
ancient DNA
equids
Equus
population genetics
Vershinina, Alisa
Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
topic_facet Genetics
Evolution & development
Biology
ancient DNA
equids
Equus
population genetics
description DNA from archaeological, paleontological, and museum samples (ancient, or aDNA) provides a unique opportunity to trace eco-evolutionary history of populations affected by environmental shifts on geological time scale. Yet it is still unclear how climate-driven environmental change and biogeographical barriers affect diversification, population size and population structure of large-bodied herbivores inhabiting northern regions of the Northern Hemisphere. The goal of this dissertation is to fill in this gap by utilizing ancient DNA techniques and population genetic analysis to reveal the demographic and population history of extinct and present-day equids, genus Equus, focusing on their key ancient dispersal corridor - the Bering Land Bridge. In the following chapters, I explore the links between paleoenvironments and population history of various equid groups using high coverage paleogenomes recovered from fossil horse specimens sampled across Beringia. In my first chapter, I use in-solution DNA capture enrichment and mitochondrial genome assembly to reconstruct a whole mitochondrial genome of a specimen found in Western Beringia and initially identified as E. hemionus, or an Asiatic wild ass. With molecular phylogenetic analysis I demonstrate that the specimen belongs to a group of caballoid horses, E. ferus, rather than stenonid wild asses. The results obtained in Chapter 1 highlight the utility of ancient DNA studies in identification of incomplete, juvenile, or otherwise problematic museum specimens. In my second chapter I discover that Beringia was a key contact zone for populations of Late Pleistocene caballoid horses, E. ferus. I use new high coverage nuclear and mitochondrial paleogenomes, isolated from fossils of caballoid horses sampled across the Northern Hemisphere to infer that North American and Eurasian caballoid horse populations diverged around 0.8-1 million years ago. With coalescent simulations and genome-wide adamixtude inference I show that evolution of caballoid horses after this divergence continued in the presence of cross-continental gene flow. My demographic inference suggests that disappearance of the Bering Land Bridge likely exacerbated an already ongoing extinction of Beringian caballoid horse populations. In the third chapter, I recover the ~700,000 year old paleogenome of a previously unknown stenonid horse species inhabiting Klondike, Canada’s Yukon Territory - the oldest non-caballoid equid genome known to date. Using genotype likelihood approach on a dataset of present-day and ancient equid nuclear genomes, I show that the population of the newly discovered stenonid equid species was evolutionary close to the present-day zebras and Asiatic wild asses. I suggest that the new to genetics species likely represents an extinct branch of archaic stenonid ungulates that coexisted with “true”, or caballoid equids in the Early-Middle Pleistocene Yukon. In the fourth chapter I expand my study system to another iconic Bringian megafauna species - steppe bison, Bison priscus. Using molecular phylogeny reconstructed from new high coverage mitochondrial genomes, I explore the phylogenetic diversity of steppe bison in Western Beringia. I confirm the existence of the deeply divergent steppe bison clade and shed new light on the evolutionary history of bison during the Pleistocene to Holocene transition in ancient Siberia.
author2 Shapiro, Beth
format Other/Unknown Material
author Vershinina, Alisa
author_facet Vershinina, Alisa
author_sort Vershinina, Alisa
title Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
title_short Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
title_full Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
title_fullStr Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
title_sort evolutionary history of early-middle and late pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2020
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2dn2j38w
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genre Bering Land Bridge
Beringia
Siberia
Yukon
genre_facet Bering Land Bridge
Beringia
Siberia
Yukon
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt2dn2j38w 2023-05-15T15:42:40+02:00 Evolutionary history of Early-Middle and Late Pleistocene equids, revealed by analysis of their paleogenomes Vershinina, Alisa Shapiro, Beth 2020-01-01 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2dn2j38w en eng eScholarship, University of California qt2dn2j38w https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2dn2j38w public Genetics Evolution & development Biology ancient DNA equids Equus population genetics etd 2020 ftcdlib 2020-08-18T09:21:19Z DNA from archaeological, paleontological, and museum samples (ancient, or aDNA) provides a unique opportunity to trace eco-evolutionary history of populations affected by environmental shifts on geological time scale. Yet it is still unclear how climate-driven environmental change and biogeographical barriers affect diversification, population size and population structure of large-bodied herbivores inhabiting northern regions of the Northern Hemisphere. The goal of this dissertation is to fill in this gap by utilizing ancient DNA techniques and population genetic analysis to reveal the demographic and population history of extinct and present-day equids, genus Equus, focusing on their key ancient dispersal corridor - the Bering Land Bridge. In the following chapters, I explore the links between paleoenvironments and population history of various equid groups using high coverage paleogenomes recovered from fossil horse specimens sampled across Beringia. In my first chapter, I use in-solution DNA capture enrichment and mitochondrial genome assembly to reconstruct a whole mitochondrial genome of a specimen found in Western Beringia and initially identified as E. hemionus, or an Asiatic wild ass. With molecular phylogenetic analysis I demonstrate that the specimen belongs to a group of caballoid horses, E. ferus, rather than stenonid wild asses. The results obtained in Chapter 1 highlight the utility of ancient DNA studies in identification of incomplete, juvenile, or otherwise problematic museum specimens. In my second chapter I discover that Beringia was a key contact zone for populations of Late Pleistocene caballoid horses, E. ferus. I use new high coverage nuclear and mitochondrial paleogenomes, isolated from fossils of caballoid horses sampled across the Northern Hemisphere to infer that North American and Eurasian caballoid horse populations diverged around 0.8-1 million years ago. With coalescent simulations and genome-wide adamixtude inference I show that evolution of caballoid horses after this divergence continued in the presence of cross-continental gene flow. My demographic inference suggests that disappearance of the Bering Land Bridge likely exacerbated an already ongoing extinction of Beringian caballoid horse populations. In the third chapter, I recover the ~700,000 year old paleogenome of a previously unknown stenonid horse species inhabiting Klondike, Canada’s Yukon Territory - the oldest non-caballoid equid genome known to date. Using genotype likelihood approach on a dataset of present-day and ancient equid nuclear genomes, I show that the population of the newly discovered stenonid equid species was evolutionary close to the present-day zebras and Asiatic wild asses. I suggest that the new to genetics species likely represents an extinct branch of archaic stenonid ungulates that coexisted with “true”, or caballoid equids in the Early-Middle Pleistocene Yukon. In the fourth chapter I expand my study system to another iconic Bringian megafauna species - steppe bison, Bison priscus. Using molecular phylogeny reconstructed from new high coverage mitochondrial genomes, I explore the phylogenetic diversity of steppe bison in Western Beringia. I confirm the existence of the deeply divergent steppe bison clade and shed new light on the evolutionary history of bison during the Pleistocene to Holocene transition in ancient Siberia. Other/Unknown Material Bering Land Bridge Beringia Siberia Yukon University of California: eScholarship Corridor The ENVELOPE(78.139,78.139,-68.582,-68.582) Corridor, The ENVELOPE(78.139,78.139,-68.582,-68.582) Yukon