Genome Sequencing Highlights Genes Under Selection and the Dynamic Early History of Dogs
Adam H. Freedman, Rena M. Schweizer, Ilan Gronau, Eunjung Han, Diego, Ortega-Del Vecchyo, Pedro M. Silva, Marco Galaverni, Zhenxin Fan, Peter Marx,, Belen Lorente-Galdos, Holly Beale, Oscar Ramirez, Farhad Hormozdiari, Can, Alkan, Carles Vil\`a, Kevin Squire, Eli Geffen

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality genome sequences to explore the early domestication history of dogs, revealing complex population dynamics, a severe domestication bottleneck, and genetic adaptations involving regulatory changes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into dog domestication timing, geographic origins, and the genetic basis of domestication, challenging previous assumptions and highlighting regulatory evolution.
Findings
Dogs and wolves diverged with population bottlenecks and gene flow.
The domestication bottleneck was more severe than previously thought.
Dog domestication likely occurred 11-16 thousand years ago.
Abstract
To identify genetic changes underlying dog domestication and reconstruct their early evolutionary history, we analyzed novel high-quality genome sequences of three gray wolves, one from each of three putative centers of dog domestication, two ancient dog lineages (Basenji and Dingo) and a golden jackal as an outgroup. We find dogs and wolves diverged through a dynamic process involving population bottlenecks in both lineages and post-divergence gene flow, which confounds previous inferences of dog origins. In dogs, the domestication bottleneck was severe involving a 17 to 49-fold reduction in population size, a much stronger bottleneck than estimated previously from less intensive sequencing efforts. A sharp bottleneck in wolves occurred soon after their divergence from dogs, implying that the pool of diversity from which dogs arose was far larger than represented by modern wolf…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies · Machine Learning in Bioinformatics · Epigenetics and DNA Methylation
