Cell Reports (Jul 2020)

Beaver and Naked Mole Rat Genomes Reveal Common Paths to Longevity

  • Xuming Zhou,
  • Qianhui Dou,
  • Guangyi Fan,
  • Quanwei Zhang,
  • Maxwell Sanderford,
  • Alaattin Kaya,
  • Jeremy Johnson,
  • Elinor K. Karlsson,
  • Xiao Tian,
  • Aleksei Mikhalchenko,
  • Sudhir Kumar,
  • Andrei Seluanov,
  • Zhengdong D. Zhang,
  • Vera Gorbunova,
  • Xin Liu,
  • Vadim N. Gladyshev

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 4
p. 107949

Abstract

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Summary: Long-lived rodents have become an attractive model for the studies on aging. To understand evolutionary paths to long life, we prepare chromosome-level genome assemblies of the two longest-lived rodents, Canadian beaver (Castor canadensis) and naked mole rat (NMR, Heterocephalus glaber), which were scaffolded with in vitro proximity ligation and chromosome conformation capture data and complemented with long-read sequencing. Our comparative genomic analyses reveal that amino acid substitutions at “disease-causing” sites are widespread in the rodent genomes and that identical substitutions in long-lived rodents are associated with common adaptive phenotypes, e.g., enhanced resistance to DNA damage and cellular stress. By employing a newly developed substitution model and likelihood ratio test, we find that energy and fatty acid metabolism pathways are enriched for signals of positive selection in both long-lived rodents. Thus, the high-quality genome resource of long-lived rodents can assist in the discovery of genetic factors that control longevity and adaptive evolution.

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