The genome of the vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus)

  1. Nelson B Freimer2
  1. 1 Washington University School of Medicine;
  2. 2 University of California Los Angeles;
  3. 3 ICREA at Institut de Biologia Evolutiva;
  4. 4 Gregor Mendel Institute;
  5. 5 University of Bari;
  6. 6 Whitehead Institute;
  7. 7 McGill University;
  8. 8 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee;
  9. 9 University of Wisconsin-Madison;
  10. 10 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center;
  11. 11 Crucell Holland B.V;
  12. 12 St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation;
  13. 13 Institut Pasteur;
  14. 14 National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases;
  15. 15 Medical Research Council;
  16. 16 Illumina;
  17. 17 Wake Forest School of Medicine;
  18. 18 Indiana University;
  19. 19 University of California Santa Cruz;
  20. 20 EBI;
  21. 21 University of Münster;
  22. 22 University of Florence;
  23. 23 National Center Biotechnology Information;
  24. 24 The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine
  1. * Corresponding author; email: wwarren{at}genome.wustl.edu

Abstract

We describe a genome reference of the African green monkey or vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops). This member of the Old World monkey (OWM) superfamily is uniquely valuable for genetic investigations of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), of which it is the most abundant natural host species, and of a wide range of health-related phenotypes assessed in Caribbean vervets (C. a. sabaeus), whose numbers have expanded dramatically since Europeans introduced small numbers of their ancestors from West Africa during the colonial era. We use the reference to characterize the genomic relationship between vervets and other primates, the intrageneric phylogeny of vervet subspecies, and genome-wide structural variations of a pedigreed C. a. sabaeus population. Through comparative analyses with human and rhesus macaque, we characterize at high resolution the unique chromosomal fission events that differentiate the vervets and their close relatives from most other catarrhine primates, in whom karyotype is highly conserved. We also provide a summary of transposable elements and contrast these with the rhesus macaque and human. Analysis of sequenced genomes representing each of the main vervet subspecies supports previously hypothesized relationships between these populations, which range across most of sub-Saharan Africa, while uncovering high levels of genetic diversity within each. Sequence-based analyses of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) polymorphisms reveal extremely low diversity in Caribbean C. a. sabaeus vervets, as compared to vervets from putatively ancestral West African regions. In the C. a. sabaeus research population we discover the first structural variations that are in some cases predicted to have a deleterious effect; future studies will determine the phenotypic impact of these variations.

  • Received April 8, 2015.
  • Accepted September 10, 2015.

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