Drivers of avian genomic change revealed by evolutionary rate decomposition
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Duchene, David A.; Chowdhury, Al-Aabid; Yang, Jingyi; Iglesias-Carrasco, Maider; Stiller, Josefin; Feng, Shaohong; Bhatt, Samir; Gilbert, M. Thomas P.; Zhang, Guojie; Tobias, Joseph A.; Ho, Simon Y. W.
署名单位:
University of Copenhagen; University of Copenhagen; University of Sydney; Imperial College London; Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC); CSIC - Estacion Biologica de Donana (EBD); University of Copenhagen; Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University; Imperial College London; Norwegian University of Science & Technology (NTNU); University of Copenhagen
刊物名称:
Nature
ISSN/ISSBN:
0028-3128
DOI:
10.1038/s41586-025-08777-7
发表日期:
2025-05-29
关键词:
phylogenetic analysis
rna surveillance
mutation-rate
r package
models
diversification
speciation
PATHWAY
lengths
tempo
摘要:
Modern birds have diversified into a striking array of forms, behaviours and ecological roles. Analyses of molecular evolutionary rates can reveal the links between genomic and phenotypic change1, 2, 3-4, but disentangling the drivers of rate variation at the whole-genome scale has been difficult. Using comprehensive estimates of traits and evolutionary rates across a family-level phylogeny of birds5,6, we find that genome-wide mutation rates across lineages are predominantly explained by clutch size and generation length, whereas rate variation across genes is driven by the content of guanine and cytosine. Here, to find the subsets of genes and lineages that dominate evolutionary rate variation in birds, we estimated the influence of individual lineages on decomposed axes of gene-specific evolutionary rates. We find that most of the rate variation occurs along recent branches of the tree, associated with present-day families of birds. Additional tests on axes of rate variation show rapid changes in microchromosomes immediately after the Cretaceous-Palaeogene transition. These apparent pulses of evolution are consistent with major changes in the genetic machineries for meiosis, heart performance, and RNA splicing, surveillance and translation, and correlate with the ecological diversity reflected in increased tarsus length. Collectively, our analyses paint a nuanced picture of avian evolution, revealing that the ancestors of the most diverse lineages of birds underwent major genomic changes related to mutation, gene usage and niche expansion in the early Palaeogene period.