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Featured researches published by Jinmin Lian.


Science | 2014

Comparative genomics reveals insights into avian genome evolution and adaptation

Guojie Zhang; Cai Li; Qiye Li; Bo Li; Denis M. Larkin; Chul Hee Lee; Jay F. Storz; Agostinho Antunes; Matthew J. Greenwold; Robert W. Meredith; Qi Zhou; Luohao Xu; Zongji Wang; Pei Zhang; Haofu Hu; Wei Yang; Jiang Hu; Jin Xiao; Zhikai Yang; Yang Liu; Qiaolin Xie; Hao Yu; Jinmin Lian; Ping Wen; Fang Zhang; Hui Li; Yongli Zeng; Zijun Xiong; Shiping Liu; Zhiyong Huang

Birds are the most species-rich class of tetrapod vertebrates and have wide relevance across many research fields. We explored bird macroevolution using full genomes from 48 avian species representing all major extant clades. The avian genome is principally characterized by its constrained size, which predominantly arose because of lineage-specific erosion of repetitive elements, large segmental deletions, and gene loss. Avian genomes furthermore show a remarkably high degree of evolutionary stasis at the levels of nucleotide sequence, gene synteny, and chromosomal structure. Despite this pattern of conservation, we detected many non-neutral evolutionary changes in protein-coding genes and noncoding regions. These analyses reveal that pan-avian genomic diversity covaries with adaptations to different lifestyles and convergent evolution of traits.


Current Biology | 2012

Genome-wide and caste-specific DNA methylomes of the ants Camponotus floridanus and Harpegnathos saltator.

Roberto Bonasio; Qiye Li; Jinmin Lian; Navdeep S. Mutti; Lijun Jin; Hongmei Zhao; Pei Zhang; Ping Wen; Hui Xiang; Yun Ding; Zonghui Jin; Steven Shen; Zongji Wang; Wen Wang; Jun Wang; Shelley L. Berger; Jürgen Liebig; Guojie Zhang; Danny Reinberg

BACKGROUND Ant societies comprise individuals belonging to different castes characterized by specialized morphologies and behaviors. Because ant embryos can follow different developmental trajectories, epigenetic mechanisms must play a role in caste determination. Ants have a full set of DNA methyltransferases and their genomes contain methylcytosine. To determine the relationship between DNA methylation and phenotypic plasticity in ants, we obtained and compared the genome-wide methylomes of different castes and developmental stages of Camponotus floridanus and Harpegnathos saltator. RESULTS In the ant genomes, methylcytosines are found both in symmetric CG dinucleotides (CpG) and non-CpG contexts and are strongly enriched at exons of active genes. Changes in exonic DNA methylation correlate with alternative splicing events such as exon skipping and alternative splice site selection. Several genes exhibit caste-specific and developmental changes in DNA methylation that are conserved between the two species, including genes involved in reproduction, telomere maintenance, and noncoding RNA metabolism. Several loci are methylated and expressed monoallelically, and in some cases, the choice of methylated allele depends on the caste. CONCLUSIONS These first ant methylomes and their intra- and interspecies comparison reveal an exonic methylation pattern that points to a connection between DNA methylation and splicing. The presence of monoallelic DNA methylation and the methylation of non-CpG sites in all samples suggest roles in genome regulation in these social insects, including the intriguing possibility of parental or caste-specific genomic imprinting.


Nature Communications | 2014

The locust genome provides insight into swarm formation and long-distance flight

Xianhui Wang; Xiaodong Fang; Pengcheng Yang; Xuanting Jiang; Feng Jiang; De-Jian Zhao; Bolei Li; Feng Cui; Jianing Wei; Chuan Ma; Y. Wang; Jing He; Yuan Luo; Zhifeng Wang; Xiaojiao Guo; Wei Guo; Xuesong Wang; Yi Zhang; Meiling Yang; Shuguang Hao; Bing Chen; Zongyuan Ma; Dan Yu; Zhiqiang Xiong; Yabing Zhu; Dingding Fan; Lijuan Han; Bo Wang; Yuanxin Chen; Junwen Wang

Locusts are one of the world’s most destructive agricultural pests and represent a useful model system in entomology. Here we present a draft 6.5 Gb genome sequence of Locusta migratoria, which is the largest animal genome sequenced so far. Our findings indicate that the large genome size of L. migratoria is likely to be because of transposable element proliferation combined with slow rates of loss for these elements. Methylome and transcriptome analyses reveal complex regulatory mechanisms involved in microtubule dynamic-mediated synapse plasticity during phase change. We find significant expansion of gene families associated with energy consumption and detoxification, consistent with long-distance flight capacity and phytophagy. We report hundreds of potential insecticide target genes, including cys-loop ligand-gated ion channels, G-protein-coupled receptors and lethal genes. The L. migratoria genome sequence offers new insights into the biology and sustainable management of this pest species, and will promote its wide use as a model system.


Genome Research | 2014

Epigenetic modification and inheritance in sexual reversal of fish

Changwei Shao; Qiye Li; Songlin Chen; Pei Zhang; Jinmin Lian; Qiaomu Hu; Bing Sun; Lijun Jin; Shanshan Liu; Zongji Wang; Hongmei Zhao; Zonghui Jin; Z. Liang; Yangzhen Li; Qiumei Zheng; Yong Zhang; Jun Wang; Guojie Zhang

Environmental sex determination (ESD) occurs in divergent, phylogenetically unrelated taxa, and in some species, co-occurs with genetic sex determination (GSD) mechanisms. Although epigenetic regulation in response to environmental effects has long been proposed to be associated with ESD, a systemic analysis on epigenetic regulation of ESD is still lacking. Using half-smooth tongue sole (Cynoglossus semilaevis) as a model-a marine fish that has both ZW chromosomal GSD and temperature-dependent ESD-we investigated the role of DNA methylation in transition from GSD to ESD. Comparative analysis of the gonadal DNA methylomes of pseudomale, female, and normal male fish revealed that genes in the sex determination pathways are the major targets of substantial methylation modification during sexual reversal. Methylation modification in pseudomales is globally inherited in their ZW offspring, which can naturally develop into pseudomales without temperature incubation. Transcriptome analysis revealed that dosage compensation occurs in a restricted, methylated cytosine enriched Z chromosomal region in pseudomale testes, achieving equal expression level in normal male testes. In contrast, female-specific W chromosomal genes are suppressed in pseudomales by methylation regulation. We conclude that epigenetic regulation plays multiple crucial roles in sexual reversal of tongue sole fish. We also offer the first clues on the mechanisms behind gene dosage balancing in an organism that undergoes sexual reversal. Finally, we suggest a causal link between the bias sex chromosome assortment in the offspring of a pseudomale family and the transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of sexual reversal in tongue sole fish.


BMC Genomics | 2013

Comparative methylomics between domesticated and wild silkworms implies possible epigenetic influences on silkworm domestication.

Hui Xiang; Xin Li; Fangyin Dai; Xun Xu; Anjiang Tan; Lei Chen; Guojie Zhang; Yun Ding; Qiye Li; Jinmin Lian; Andrew Willden; Qiuhong Guo; Qingyou Xia; Jun Wang; Wen Wang

BackgroundIn contrast to wild species, which have typically evolved phenotypes over long periods of natural selection, domesticates rapidly gained human-preferred agronomic traits in a relatively short-time frame via artificial selection. Under domesticated conditions, many traits can be observed that cannot only be due to environmental alteration. In the case of silkworms, aside from genetic divergence, whether epigenetic divergence played a role in domestication is an unanswered question. The silkworm is still an enigma in that it has two DNA methyltransferases (DNMT1 and DNMT2) but their functionality is unknown. Even in particular the functionality of the widely distributed DNMT1 remains unknown in insects in general.ResultsBy embryonic RNA interference, we reveal that knockdown of silkworm Dnmt1 caused decreased hatchability, providing the first direct experimental evidence of functional significance of insect Dnmt1. In the light of this fact and those that DNA methylation is correlated with gene expression in silkworms and some agronomic traits in domesticated organisms are not stable, we comprehensively compare silk gland methylomes of 3 domesticated (Bombyx mori) and 4 wild (Bombyx mandarina) silkworms to identify differentially methylated genes between the two. We observed 2-fold more differentiated methylated cytosinces (mCs) in domesticated silkworms as compared to their wild counterparts, suggesting a trend of increasing DNA methylation during domestication. Further study of more domesticated and wild silkworms narrowed down the domesticates’ epimutations, and we were able to identify a number of differential genes. One such gene showing demethyaltion in domesticates correspondently displays lower gene expression, and more interestingly, has experienced selective sweep. A methylation-increased gene seems to result in higher expression in domesticates and the function of its Drosophila homolog was previously found to be essential for cell volume regulation, indicating a possible correlation with the enlargement of silk glands in domesticated silkworms.ConclusionsOur results imply epigenetic influences at work during domestication, which gives insight into long time historical controversies regarding acquired inheritance.


Nature Communications | 2014

Caste-specific RNA editomes in the leaf-cutting ant Acromyrmex echinatior

Qiye Li; Zongji Wang; Jinmin Lian; Morten Schiøtt; Lijun Jin; Pei Zhang; Yanyan Zhang; Sanne Nygaard; Zhiyu Peng; Yang Zhou; Yuan Deng; Wenwei Zhang; Jacobus J. Boomsma; Guojie Zhang

Eusocial insects have evolved the capacity to generate adults with distinct morphological, reproductive and behavioural phenotypes from the same genome. Recent studies suggest that RNA editing might enhance the diversity of gene products at the post-transcriptional level, particularly to induce functional changes in the nervous system. Using head samples from the leaf-cutting ant Acromyrmex echinatior, we compare RNA editomes across eusocial castes, identifying ca. 11,000 RNA editing sites in gynes, large workers and small workers. Those editing sites map to 800 genes functionally enriched for neurotransmission, circadian rhythm, temperature response, RNA splicing and carboxylic acid biosynthesis. Most A. echinatior editing sites are species specific, but 8–23% are conserved across ant subfamilies and likely to have been important for the evolution of eusociality in ants. The level of editing varies for the same site between castes, suggesting that RNA editing might be a general mechanism that shapes caste behaviour in ants.


GigaScience | 2016

RES-Scanner: a software package for genome-wide identification of RNA-editing sites

Zongji Wang; Jinmin Lian; Qiye Li; Pei Zhang; Yang Zhou; Xiaoyu Zhan; Guojie Zhang

BackgroundHigh-throughput sequencing (HTS) provides a powerful solution for the genome-wide identification of RNA-editing sites. However, it remains a great challenge to distinguish RNA-editing sites from genetic variants and technical artifacts caused by sequencing or read-mapping errors.ResultsHere we present RES-Scanner, a flexible and efficient software package that detects and annotates RNA-editing sites using matching RNA-seq and DNA-seq data from the same individuals or samples. RES-Scanner allows the use of both raw HTS reads and pre-aligned reads in BAM format as inputs. When inputs are HTS reads, RES-Scanner can invoke the BWA mapper to align reads to the reference genome automatically. To rigorously identify potential false positives resulting from genetic variants, we have equipped RES-Scanner with sophisticated statistical models to infer the reliability of homozygous genotypes called from DNA-seq data. These models are applicable to samples from either single individuals or a pool of multiple individuals if the ploidy information is known. In addition, RES-Scanner implements statistical tests to distinguish genuine RNA-editing sites from sequencing errors, and provides a series of sophisticated filtering options to remove false positives resulting from mapping errors. Finally, RES-Scanner can improve the completeness and accuracy of editing site identification when the data of multiple samples are available.ConclusionRES-Scanner, as a software package written in the Perl programming language, provides a comprehensive solution that addresses read mapping, homozygous genotype calling, de novo RNA-editing site identification and annotation for any species with matching RNA-seq and DNA-seq data. The package is freely available.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Whole-genome sequence of a flatfish provides insights into ZW sex chromosome evolution and adaptation to a benthic lifestyle

Songlin Chen; Guojie Zhang; Changwei Shao; Quanfei Huang; Geng Liu; Pei Zhang; Wentao Song; Na An; Domitille Chalopin; Jean-Nicolas Volff; Yunhan Hong; Qiye Li; Zhenxia Sha; Heling Zhou; Mingshu Xie; Qiulin Yu; Yang Liu; Hui Xiang; Na Wang; Kui Wu; Chang-Geng Yang; Qian Zhou; Xiaolin Liao; Linfeng Yang; Qiaomu Hu; Jilin Zhang; Liang Meng; Lijun Jin; Yongsheng Tian; Jinmin Lian


Molecular Plant | 2015

The Genome of Dendrobium officinale Illuminates the Biology of the Important Traditional Chinese Orchid Herb

Liang Yan; Xiao Wang; Hui Liu; Yang Tian; Jinmin Lian; Ruijuan Yang; Shumei Hao; Xuanjun Wang; Shengchao Yang; Qiye Li; Shuai Qi; Ling Kui; Moses Okpekum; Xiao Ma; Jiajin Zhang; Zhaoli Ding; Guojie Zhang; Wen Wang; Yang Dong; Jun Sheng


GigaScience | 2015

High-coverage sequencing and annotated assembly of the genome of the Australian dragon lizard Pogona vitticeps

Arthur Georges; Qiye Li; Jinmin Lian; Denis O’Meally; Janine E. Deakin; Zongji Wang; Pei Zhang; Matthew K. Fujita; Hardip R. Patel; Clare E. Holleley; Yang Zhou; Xiuwen Zhang; Kazumi Matsubara; Paul D. Waters; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves; Stephen D. Sarre; Guojie Zhang

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Qiye Li

University of Copenhagen

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Guojie Zhang

University of Copenhagen

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Pei Zhang

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Zongji Wang

South China University of Technology

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Hui Xiang

Kunming Institute of Zoology

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Jun Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ping Wen

Beijing Genomics Institute

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Wen Wang

Kunming Institute of Zoology

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Yang Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Haofu Hu

University of Copenhagen

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