Bison: nuclear genomics: Difference between revisions

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=== The bison prion gene and species barrier to CWD ===
=== The bison prion gene and species barrier to CWD ===


The prion gene PRNP is one of the most intensively sequenced of all mammalian autosomal genes. Bison has independent sequences though none of these is sourced at their GenBank entry or [[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15477588,16033959 accompanying publications].
The prion gene PRNP is one of the most intensively sequenced of all mammalian autosomal genes. Bison has independent sequences though none of these is geographically sourced at their GenBank entry or [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15477588,16033959 accompanying publications].


The bison PRNP gene overall is identical to those of its outgroups, yak, domestic cow, and water buffalo as befits a slowly evolving protein. However an interesting bison allele has been identified, namely M17T. This lies well within the signal peptide cleaved during maturation so does not appear in the final GPI-anchored protein on the exterior of the cytoplasmic membrane.
Thus this allele cannot influence the species barrier of bison to prion disease. The species barrier is difficult to predict but that of bison will be identical to cow. That risk comes from three sources: germline or somatic mutation in an individual, transmission from a public lands domestic sheep with scrapie, or transmission from deer, elk or moose affected with chronic wasting disease (scrapie that has previously crossed the cervid species barrier).
Prion disease is autosomal dominant. It represents toxic gain of function, not loss of normal protein function (which remains unknown despite 9,000 publications).
WGFD WBb0401
WGFD WBb0401



Revision as of 13:27, 17 February 2011

Bison conservation genomics: introduction

The main nuclear genome of bison, like the mitochondrial genome, will have significant conservation management issues because the consequences of nineteenth and twentieth century bottlenecks (and consequent inbreeding) are still with us today.

BisonPophistory.gif

Most conservation herds are derived from a tiny founding populations and maintained for many decades at far too low a population level, with surplus animals removed episodically without the slightest consideration of population genetic impacts. Other management practices such elimination of predators, winter feeding, gender imbalance, culling of unruly bulls, and trophy hunts also interfere with natural selection (survival of the fittest).

The founding individuals of a given herd -- even previously wild animals experiencing millenia of natural selection -- still have a substantial genetic load . Autosomal recessives form an important component of that load and are the primary focus here. These are gene mutations found in one of the two copies of non-sex chromosomes that are more or less masked by compensation by the properly functioning copy.

When the founding population is small, the gene frequency of an autosomal recessive mutation is necessarily high. As inbreeding is unavoidable, offspring can inherit two bad copies of the gene. In this homozygous state, no compensation can occur and the disease associated with the mutation is fully manifested. Note populations often harbor mutations at different sites in the same gene. Here the affected offspring can be a compound heterozygote -- two bad copies but at different sites in the same protein.

Looking just at same-site autosomal recessives, the two variables are the frequency q of the bad allele in the population and the coefficient of inbreeding f. The latter simply tallies the percentage of identical alleles by inherited descent (autozygosity). There is an assumption here that would not be valid for the YNP bison nineteenth century bottleneck, namely that the surviving parental animals were not already inbred.

This can be translated into millions of DNA base pairs lacking heterozygosity assuming a bison nuclear genome size of three billion. Then for f at 1/4, there 716,000,000 base pairs of inbreeding derived homozygosity, enough for 5,000 protein coding genes. This DNA will be somewhat broken up into blocks by recombination. For f at 1/8, these numbers are 358,000,000 bp and 2,500 genes. Other coefficients of inbreeding are quickly computed:

  • Father/daughter, mother/son or brother/sister → 25%
  • Grandfather/granddaughter or grandmother/grandson → 12.5%
  • Half-brother/half-sister → 12.5%
  • Uncle/niece or aunt/nephew → 12.5%
  • Great-grandfather/great-granddaughter or great-grandmother/great-grandson → 6.25%
  • Half-uncle/niece or half-aunt/nephew → 6.25%
  • First cousins → 6.25%
  • First cousins once removed or half-first cousins → 3.1%
  • Second cousins or first cousins twice removed → 1.6%
  • Second cousins once removed or half-second cousins → 0.78%

The frequency of an autosomal recessive disorder in the offspring of a consanguineous mating is then qf + qq (1-f). Inserting various coefficients of inbreeding and realistic values of deleterious alleles, it quickly emerges that almost all autosomal recessive disease in bison arises from inbreeding. Very rarely does it arise in the offspring of remotely related animals.

Example: suppose a bison bull is dominant for a few years. If it breeds with a calf it previously sired, f is 1/4. The odds that recessive disease did not result from inbreeding only exceed 50-50 when q exceeds 1/3. However q = 0.1 is the largest q known in human disease (hemochromatosis). Cystic fibrosis is another extreme case but there q is only 0.02. For a bison disease allele at that frequency, with a disease observed in the offspring, the odds are overwhelming (94%) that it came from inbreeding, not mating of unrelated bison representative of the whole populations. The odds are still high for the grandparent and first cousin situations (88% and 77%) and are higher still for lower q that are more typical. In summary, autosomal recessive disease in bison can be brought back to natural levels simply by avoidance of inbreeding.

Extensive whole genome sequencing in humans has established that each individual human carries 275 loss-of-function variants and 75 variants previously implicated in inherited disease (both classes typically heterozygous and differing from person to person), additionally varying from the reference human proteome of 9,000,000 amino acids at 10,500 other sites (0.12%). The deleterious alleles include 200 in-frame indels, 90 premature stop codons, 45 splice-site-disrupting variants and 235 deletions shifting reading frame.

In bison the overall genetic load will surely be worse in view of extreme bottlenecks, small herd size history and unavoidable inbreeding. Offspring with deleterious nuclear genes in the homozygous state will be more abundant than in humans who are inbred too but not nearly to the same extent.

Measuring incest in bison

Little bison nuclear genome data is currently available but that situation is changing rapidly with ongoing whole genome sequencing projects not only for bison but also of closely related species such as yak, water buffalo, domestic cow and fossil steppe and plains bison that can help establish a baseline of normality for current conservation herd bison.

Humans however are already intensively studied. Here incest studies in human have transferable implications to bison herds with limited a number of bulls or a single bull maintaining breeding dominance across generations. The graphic at left shows how a human SNP chip detected incest in a 3-year-old boy with multiple medical issues without access to parental dna.

IncestSnp.jpg

The green blocks show 668 million base pairs of DNA homozygosity out of the 716 Mbp expected for parent-child incest (coefficient of inbreeding 1/4, human genome size 3.000 Mbp). This represents a quarter of the genes, so approximately 5,000 of which 62 would be expected to have carried deleterious mutations. Some 31 on average would now be homozygous deleterious in the child.

Humans exiting Africa experienced significant bottlenecks then and during subsequent glaciations and climate change as well as founding population migrations. Inbreeding was unavoidable at times. Cousin marriage remains very common today in human populations, with some long been closed to outsiders and now rife with autosomal recessive disease. Thus there is considerable applicability of human data to the bison situation.

The diagram below shows genealogical terminology relative to inbreeding. It is important to track gender because X-linked mutations manifest themselves readily in males (because the X chromosome there is single copy). Additionally, the mitochondrial genome is maternally inherited and the two genomes need to be co-managed. The Y chromosome is also of interest because its non-recombining portion in bison-cow hybrid herds would still be intact (initial crosses always used a bison bull).

Cousins.gif

Incest is a crime in nearly all human societies but management-driven incest in bison is not. The SNP chip here had 620,901 markers, representing 12x the resolution available for the comparable cattle chip applied to bison. Thus the bison chip would give clear results but not the sharp resolution because the median marker spacing would slip to 32.4 kbp and the average spacing to 56.4 kbp. For matings between bison related at the second degree (uncle-niece, double first cousins), the inbreeding coefficient is 1/8 and expected level of homozygosity 358 Mb. Here the calf would carry roughly 15 deleterious mutations.

Bison are routinely corralled and tested for previous exposure to brucellosis. The blood samples taken also serve for DNA sampling, where a tiny volume placed on special filter paper would be stable for years at room temperature. These FTA cards provide DNA suitable for readout on the widely used bovine SNP Illumina beadchip. Thus it is fast and cheap to determine the extent of inbreeding at Yellowstone National Park even though cattle introgression (the original use of the chip in bison) is not the issue there. Inbreeding and long-ago introgression are just opposite extremes.

Actual opportunistic measurement of corralled, radio-collared, or naturally expired animals is vastly preferable to academic exercises in theoretic population modeling. There is no real interest in maintenance of neutral allele frequencies measured by microsatellites or junk DNA SNPs but rather in consequential frequencies of deleterious alleles in specific genes that are the legacy of the initial bottleneck, as well as adaptive alleles. The genes and alleles of interest have only been determined so far for bison mitochondria.

Real bison herds are impossibly complex. The females are strongly matrilocal. Although distinct herds may persist for decades because of physical barriers between valleys, bulls and sometimes family groups of cows may wander between them. The herd sizes and composition fluctuate dramatically from year to year depending primarily on the severity of culls, its targeting to extended family groups, snowfall in winter, and susceptibility to predation and disease.

One wonders what management purpose the obscure theoretical constructs of population ecology can serve in real world conservation genomics, given real bison herds have constantly shifting and essentially unmeasurable hereditary allele parameters in 20,000 genes, with two weakly related bison differing at more than 10,500 amino acid sites.


Microsatellites are worthless for conservation genomics

(to be continued)


Results to date from the bovine SNP chip

(to be continued)


The bison prion gene and species barrier to CWD

The prion gene PRNP is one of the most intensively sequenced of all mammalian autosomal genes. Bison has independent sequences though none of these is geographically sourced at their GenBank entry or accompanying publications.

The bison PRNP gene overall is identical to those of its outgroups, yak, domestic cow, and water buffalo as befits a slowly evolving protein. However an interesting bison allele has been identified, namely M17T. This lies well within the signal peptide cleaved during maturation so does not appear in the final GPI-anchored protein on the exterior of the cytoplasmic membrane.

Thus this allele cannot influence the species barrier of bison to prion disease. The species barrier is difficult to predict but that of bison will be identical to cow. That risk comes from three sources: germline or somatic mutation in an individual, transmission from a public lands domestic sheep with scrapie, or transmission from deer, elk or moose affected with chronic wasting disease (scrapie that has previously crossed the cervid species barrier).

Prion disease is autosomal dominant. It represents toxic gain of function, not loss of normal protein function (which remains unknown despite 9,000 publications). WGFD WBb0401



MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Bison bison CR227All1 AY769958
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Bison bison CR227All2
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Bison bonasus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Bos taurus
MVKRHIGSWILVLFVVMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Bubalus bubalis
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVVMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Syncerus caffer
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Rangifer tarandus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Alces alces
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Capreolus capreolus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Kobus megaceros
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Connochaetes taurinus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ammotragus lervia
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Hippotragus niger
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Capris hircus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Cervus elaphus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Cervus elaphus nelsoni
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Dama dama
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Odocoileus virginianus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVALCKKRPKPG     Oryx leucoryx
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ovibos moschatus
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ovis aries
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ovis canadensis
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVALCKKRPKPG     Tragelaphus strepsiceros
MVKSHIGGWILVLFVAAWSDIGLCKKRPKPG     Sus scrofa
MVKSHMGSWILVLFVVTWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Camelus dromedarius
MVKSHMGSWILVLFVVTWSDMGLCKKRPKPG     Vicugna vicugna
MVKSLVGGWILLLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Myotis lucifugus
MVKNYIGGWILVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Pteropus vampyrus
MVKSHIANWILVLFVATWSDMGFCKKRPKPG     Tursiops truncatus
MVKSHIGGWILLLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Canis lupus familiaris
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Felis catus
MVKSHIGSWLLVLFVATWSDIGFCKKRPKPG     Mustela putorius
MVKSHIGSWLLVLFVATWSDIGFCKKRPKPG     Mustela vison
MVKSHIGSWILVLFVAMWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ailuropoda melanoleuca
MVKSHVGGWILVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Equus caballus
MVRSHVGGWILVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Diceros bicornis
MVKNHVGCWLLVLFVATWSEVGLCKKRPKPG     Erinaceus europaeus
MVTGHLGCWLLVLFMATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Sorex araneus 
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Homo sapiens
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Pan troglodytes
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Gorilla gorilla
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Pongo pygmaeus
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Nomascus leucogenys
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Hylobates lar
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Symphalangus syndactylus
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Macaca arctoides
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Macaca fascicularis
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Macaca fuscata
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Macaca mulatta
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Macaca nemestrina
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Papio hamadryas
MA--NLGCWMLFLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Callithrix jacchus
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Cebus apella
MA--NLGCWMLVVFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Cercopithecus aethiops
MA--NLGCWMLVVFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Cercopithecus dianae
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Colobus guereza
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Presbytis francoisi
MA--NLGCWMLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRPKPG     Saimiri sciureus
MA--KLGYWLLVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Tarsius syrichta
MA--NLGCWMLVVFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Microcebus murinus
MA--RLGCWMLVLFVATWSDIGLCKKRPKPG     Otolemur garnettii
ME--NLGCWMLILFVATWSDIGLCKKRPKPG     Cynocephalus variegatus
MA--QLGCWLMVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Tupaia belangeri
MA--NLGYWLLALFVTMWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Mus musculus
MA--NLGYWLLALFVTTCTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Rattus norvegicus
MA--NLGYWLLALFVTTCTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Rattus rattus
MA--NAGCWLLVLFVATWSDTGLCKKRPKPG     Cavia porcellus
MA--NLGYWLLALFVTTWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Apodemus sylvaticus
MA--NLGCWLLVLFVATWSDLGLCKKRTKPG     Dipodomys ordii
MA--NLSYWLLAFFVTTWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Clethrionomys glareolus
MA--NLSYWLLALFVATWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Cricetulus griseus
MA--NLSYWLLALFVATWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Cricetulus migratorius
MA--NLGYWLLALFVTMWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Meriones unguiculatus
MA--NLSYWLLALFVAMWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Mesocricetus auratus
MA--NLGYWLLALFVATWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Sigmodon fulviventer
MA--NLGYWLLALFVATWTDVGLCKKRPKPG     Sigmodon hispiedis
MV--NPGCWLLVLFVATLSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Spermophilus tridecemlineatus
MV--NPGYWLLVLFVATLSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Sciurus vulgaris
MA--HLGYWMLLLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Oryctolagus cuniculus
MA--HLSYWLLVLFVAAWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Ochotona princeps
MVKSHLGCWIMVLFVATWSEVGLCKKRPKPG     Cyclopes didactylus
MVRSRVGCWLLLLFVATWSELGLCKKRPKPG     Dasypus novemcinctus
MVKGTVSCWLLVLVVAACSDMGLCKKRPKPG     Echinops telfairi
MVKSSLGCWILVLFVATWSDMGLCKKRPKPG     Elephas maximus
MVKSSLGCWILVLFVATWSDMGLCKKRPKPG     Loxodonta africana
MVKSSLGCWMLVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Procavia capensis
MMKSGLGCWILVLFVATWSDVGLCKKRPKPG     Orycteropus afer
MVKSGLGCWILVLFVATWSDVGVCKKRPKPG     Trichechus manatus
MAKIQLGYWILALFIVTWSELGLCKKPKTRPG    Macropus eugenii
MGKIHLGYWFLALFIMTWSDLTLCKKPKPRPG    Monodelphis domestica
MGKIQLGYWILVLFIVTWSDLGLCKKPKPRPG    Trichosurus vulpecular

(to be continued)