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Dive into the research topics where Tomas Marques-Bonet is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomas Marques-Bonet.


Science | 2010

A draft sequence of the Neandertal genome.

Richard E. Green; Johannes Krause; Adrian W. Briggs; Tomislav Maricic; Udo Stenzel; Martin Kircher; Nick Patterson; Heng Li; Weiwei Zhai; Markus Hsi-Yang Fritz; Nancy F. Hansen; Eric Durand; Anna-Sapfo Malaspinas; Jeffrey D. Jensen; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Can Alkan; Kay Prüfer; Matthias Meyer; Hernán A. Burbano; Jeffrey M. Good; Rigo Schultz; Ayinuer Aximu-Petri; Anne Butthof; Barbara Höber; Barbara Höffner; Madlen Siegemund; Antje Weihmann; Chad Nusbaum; Eric S. Lander; Carsten Russ

Kissing Cousins Neandertals, our closest relatives, ranged across Europe and Southwest Asia before their extinction approximately 30,000 years ago. Green et al. (p. 710) report a draft sequence of the Neandertal genome, created from three individuals, and compare it with genomes of five modern humans. The results suggest that ancient genomes of human relatives can be recovered with acceptably low contamination from modern human DNA. Because ancient DNA can be contaminated with microbial DNA, Burbano et al. (p. 723) developed a target sequence capture approach to obtain 14 kilobases of Neandertal DNA from a fairly poorly preserved sample with a high microbial load. A number of genomic regions and genes were revealed as candidates for positive selection early in modern human history. The genomic data suggest that Neandertals mixed with modern human ancestors some 120,000 years ago, leaving traces of Neandertal DNA in contemporary humans. Gene flow has occurred from Neandertals to humans of Eurasian descent, but not to Africans. Neandertals, the closest evolutionary relatives of present-day humans, lived in large parts of Europe and western Asia before disappearing 30,000 years ago. We present a draft sequence of the Neandertal genome composed of more than 4 billion nucleotides from three individuals. Comparisons of the Neandertal genome to the genomes of five present-day humans from different parts of the world identify a number of genomic regions that may have been affected by positive selection in ancestral modern humans, including genes involved in metabolism and in cognitive and skeletal development. We show that Neandertals shared more genetic variants with present-day humans in Eurasia than with present-day humans in sub-Saharan Africa, suggesting that gene flow from Neandertals into the ancestors of non-Africans occurred before the divergence of Eurasian groups from each other.


Nature | 2010

Genetic history of an archaic hominin group from Denisova Cave in Siberia

David Reich; Richard E. Green; Martin Kircher; Johannes Krause; Nick Patterson; Eric Durand; Bence Viola; Adrian W. Briggs; Udo Stenzel; Philip L. F. Johnson; Tomislav Maricic; Jeffrey M. Good; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Can Alkan; Qiaomei Fu; Swapan Mallick; Heng Li; Matthias Meyer; Evan E. Eichler; Mark Stoneking; Michael P. Richards; Sahra Talamo; Michael V. Shunkov; Anatoli P. Derevianko; Jean-Jacques Hublin; Janet Kelso; Montgomery Slatkin; Svante Pääbo

Using DNA extracted from a finger bone found in Denisova Cave in southern Siberia, we have sequenced the genome of an archaic hominin to about 1.9-fold coverage. This individual is from a group that shares a common origin with Neanderthals. This population was not involved in the putative gene flow from Neanderthals into Eurasians; however, the data suggest that it contributed 4–6% of its genetic material to the genomes of present-day Melanesians. We designate this hominin population ‘Denisovans’ and suggest that it may have been widespread in Asia during the Late Pleistocene epoch. A tooth found in Denisova Cave carries a mitochondrial genome highly similar to that of the finger bone. This tooth shares no derived morphological features with Neanderthals or modern humans, further indicating that Denisovans have an evolutionary history distinct from Neanderthals and modern humans.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Personalized copy number and segmental duplication maps using next-generation sequencing

Can Alkan; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Gozde Aksay; Francesca Antonacci; Fereydoun Hormozdiari; Jacob O. Kitzman; Carl Baker; Maika Malig; Onur Mutlu; S. Cenk Sahinalp; Richard A. Gibbs; Evan E. Eichler

Despite their importance in gene innovation and phenotypic variation, duplicated regions have remained largely intractable owing to difficulties in accurately resolving their structure, copy number and sequence content. We present an algorithm (mrFAST) to comprehensively map next-generation sequence reads, which allows for the prediction of absolute copy-number variation of duplicated segments and genes. We examine three human genomes and experimentally validate genome-wide copy number differences. We estimate that, on average, 73–87 genes vary in copy number between any two individuals and find that these genic differences overwhelmingly correspond to segmental duplications (odds ratio = 135; P < 2.2 × 10−16). Our method can distinguish between different copies of highly identical genes, providing a more accurate assessment of gene content and insight into functional constraint without the limitations of array-based technology.


Nature | 2012

Insights into hominid evolution from the gorilla genome sequence.

Aylwyn Scally; Julien Y. Dutheil; LaDeana W. Hillier; Gregory Jordan; Ian Goodhead; Javier Herrero; Asger Hobolth; Tuuli Lappalainen; Thomas Mailund; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Shane McCarthy; Stephen H. Montgomery; Petra C. Schwalie; Y. Amy Tang; Michelle C. Ward; Yali Xue; Bryndis Yngvadottir; Can Alkan; Lars Nørvang Andersen; Qasim Ayub; Edward V. Ball; Kathryn Beal; Brenda J. Bradley; Yuan Chen; Chris Clee; Stephen Fitzgerald; Tina Graves; Yong Gu; Paul Heath; Andreas Heger

Gorillas are humans’ closest living relatives after chimpanzees, and are of comparable importance for the study of human origins and evolution. Here we present the assembly and analysis of a genome sequence for the western lowland gorilla, and compare the whole genomes of all extant great ape genera. We propose a synthesis of genetic and fossil evidence consistent with placing the human–chimpanzee and human–chimpanzee–gorilla speciation events at approximately 6 and 10 million years ago. In 30% of the genome, gorilla is closer to human or chimpanzee than the latter are to each other; this is rarer around coding genes, indicating pervasive selection throughout great ape evolution, and has functional consequences in gene expression. A comparison of protein coding genes reveals approximately 500 genes showing accelerated evolution on each of the gorilla, human and chimpanzee lineages, and evidence for parallel acceleration, particularly of genes involved in hearing. We also compare the western and eastern gorilla species, estimating an average sequence divergence time 1.75 million years ago, but with evidence for more recent genetic exchange and a population bottleneck in the eastern species. The use of the genome sequence in these and future analyses will promote a deeper understanding of great ape biology and evolution.


Nature | 2011

Comparative and demographic analysis of orang-utan genomes

Devin P. Locke; LaDeana W. Hillier; Wesley C. Warren; Kim C. Worley; Lynne V. Nazareth; Donna M. Muzny; Shiaw-Pyng Yang; Zhengyuan Wang; Asif T. Chinwalla; Patrick Minx; Makedonka Mitreva; Lisa Cook; Kim D. Delehaunty; Catrina C. Fronick; Heather K. Schmidt; Lucinda A. Fulton; Robert S. Fulton; Joanne O. Nelson; Vincent Magrini; Craig S. Pohl; Tina Graves; Chris Markovic; Andy Cree; Huyen Dinh; Jennifer Hume; Christie Kovar; Gerald Fowler; Gerton Lunter; Stephen Meader; Andreas Heger

‘Orang-utan’ is derived from a Malay term meaning ‘man of the forest’ and aptly describes the southeast Asian great apes native to Sumatra and Borneo. The orang-utan species, Pongo abelii (Sumatran) and Pongo pygmaeus (Bornean), are the most phylogenetically distant great apes from humans, thereby providing an informative perspective on hominid evolution. Here we present a Sumatran orang-utan draft genome assembly and short read sequence data from five Sumatran and five Bornean orang-utan genomes. Our analyses reveal that, compared to other primates, the orang-utan genome has many unique features. Structural evolution of the orang-utan genome has proceeded much more slowly than other great apes, evidenced by fewer rearrangements, less segmental duplication, a lower rate of gene family turnover and surprisingly quiescent Alu repeats, which have played a major role in restructuring other primate genomes. We also describe a primate polymorphic neocentromere, found in both Pongo species, emphasizing the gradual evolution of orang-utan genome structure. Orang-utans have extremely low energy usage for a eutherian mammal, far lower than their hominid relatives. Adding their genome to the repertoire of sequenced primates illuminates new signals of positive selection in several pathways including glycolipid metabolism. From the population perspective, both Pongo species are deeply diverse; however, Sumatran individuals possess greater diversity than their Bornean counterparts, and more species-specific variation. Our estimate of Bornean/Sumatran speciation time, 400,000 years ago, is more recent than most previous studies and underscores the complexity of the orang-utan speciation process. Despite a smaller modern census population size, the Sumatran effective population size (Ne) expanded exponentially relative to the ancestral Ne after the split, while Bornean Ne declined over the same period. Overall, the resources and analyses presented here offer new opportunities in evolutionary genomics, insights into hominid biology, and an extensive database of variation for conservation efforts.


Nature | 2013

Great ape genetic diversity and population history

Javier Prado-Martinez; Peter H. Sudmant; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Heng Li; Joanna L. Kelley; Belen Lorente-Galdos; Krishna R. Veeramah; August E. Woerner; Timothy D. O’Connor; Gabriel Santpere; Alexander Cagan; Christoph Theunert; Ferran Casals; Hafid Laayouni; Kasper Munch; Asger Hobolth; Anders E. Halager; Maika Malig; Jessica Hernandez-Rodriguez; Irene Hernando-Herraez; Kay Prüfer; Marc Pybus; Laurel Johnstone; Michael Lachmann; Can Alkan; Dorina Twigg; Natalia Petit; Carl Baker; Fereydoun Hormozdiari; Marcos Fernandez-Callejo

Most great ape genetic variation remains uncharacterized; however, its study is critical for understanding population history, recombination, selection and susceptibility to disease. Here we sequence to high coverage a total of 79 wild- and captive-born individuals representing all six great ape species and seven subspecies and report 88.8 million single nucleotide polymorphisms. Our analysis provides support for genetically distinct populations within each species, signals of gene flow, and the split of common chimpanzees into two distinct groups: Nigeria–Cameroon/western and central/eastern populations. We find extensive inbreeding in almost all wild populations, with eastern gorillas being the most extreme. Inferred effective population sizes have varied radically over time in different lineages and this appears to have a profound effect on the genetic diversity at, or close to, genes in almost all species. We discover and assign 1,982 loss-of-function variants throughout the human and great ape lineages, determining that the rate of gene loss has not been different in the human branch compared to other internal branches in the great ape phylogeny. This comprehensive catalogue of great ape genome diversity provides a framework for understanding evolution and a resource for more effective management of wild and captive great ape populations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

The genome of melon (Cucumis melo L.)

Jordi Garcia-Mas; Andrej Benjak; Walter Sanseverino; Michael Bourgeois; Gisela Mir; Victor Gonzalez; Elizabeth Hénaff; Francisco Câmara; Luca Cozzuto; Ernesto Lowy; Tyler Alioto; Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez; José Blanca; Joaquín Cañizares; Pello Ziarsolo; Daniel Gonzalez-Ibeas; Luis Rodríguez-Moreno; Marcus Droege; Lei Du; Miguel Alvarez-Tejado; Belen Lorente-Galdos; Marta Melé; Luming Yang; Yiqun Weng; Arcadi Navarro; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Miguel A. Aranda; Fernando Nuez; Belén Picó; Toni Gabaldón

We report the genome sequence of melon, an important horticultural crop worldwide. We assembled 375 Mb of the double-haploid line DHL92, representing 83.3% of the estimated melon genome. We predicted 27,427 protein-coding genes, which we analyzed by reconstructing 22,218 phylogenetic trees, allowing mapping of the orthology and paralogy relationships of sequenced plant genomes. We observed the absence of recent whole-genome duplications in the melon lineage since the ancient eudicot triplication, and our data suggest that transposon amplification may in part explain the increased size of the melon genome compared with the close relative cucumber. A low number of nucleotide-binding site–leucine-rich repeat disease resistance genes were annotated, suggesting the existence of specific defense mechanisms in this species. The DHL92 genome was compared with that of its parental lines allowing the quantification of sequence variability in the species. The use of the genome sequence in future investigations will facilitate the understanding of evolution of cucurbits and the improvement of breeding strategies.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Genome Sequencing Highlights the Dynamic Early History of Dogs

Adam H. Freedman; Ilan Gronau; Rena M. Schweizer; Diego Ortega-Del Vecchyo; Eunjung Han; Pedro Miguel Silva; Marco Galaverni; Zhenxin Fan; Peter Marx; Belen Lorente-Galdos; Holly C. Beale; Oscar Ramirez; Farhad Hormozdiari; Can Alkan; Carles Vilà; Kevin Squire; Eli Geffen; Josip Kusak; Adam R. Boyko; Heidi G. Parker; Clarence Lee; Vasisht Tadigotla; Adam Siepel; Carlos Bustamante; Timothy T. Harkins; Stanley F. Nelson; Elaine A. Ostrander; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Robert K. Wayne; John Novembre

To identify genetic changes underlying dog domestication and reconstruct their early evolutionary history, we generated high-quality genome sequences from three gray wolves, one from each of the three putative centers of dog domestication, two basal dog lineages (Basenji and Dingo) and a golden jackal as an outgroup. Analysis of these sequences supports a demographic model in which dogs and wolves diverged through a dynamic process involving population bottlenecks in both lineages and post-divergence gene flow. In dogs, the domestication bottleneck involved at least a 16-fold reduction in population size, a much more severe bottleneck than estimated previously. A sharp bottleneck in wolves occurred soon after their divergence from dogs, implying that the pool of diversity from which dogs arose was substantially larger than represented by modern wolf populations. We narrow the plausible range for the date of initial dog domestication to an interval spanning 11–16 thousand years ago, predating the rise of agriculture. In light of this finding, we expand upon previous work regarding the increase in copy number of the amylase gene (AMY2B) in dogs, which is believed to have aided digestion of starch in agricultural refuse. We find standing variation for amylase copy number variation in wolves and little or no copy number increase in the Dingo and Husky lineages. In conjunction with the estimated timing of dog origins, these results provide additional support to archaeological finds, suggesting the earliest dogs arose alongside hunter-gathers rather than agriculturists. Regarding the geographic origin of dogs, we find that, surprisingly, none of the extant wolf lineages from putative domestication centers is more closely related to dogs, and, instead, the sampled wolves form a sister monophyletic clade. This result, in combination with dog-wolf admixture during the process of domestication, suggests that a re-evaluation of past hypotheses regarding dog origins is necessary.


Nature | 2012

The bonobo genome compared with the chimpanzee and human genomes

Kay Prüfer; Kasper Munch; Ines Hellmann; Keiko Akagi; Jason R. Miller; Brian Walenz; Sergey Koren; Granger Sutton; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Roger Winer; James Knight; James C. Mullikin; Stephen Meader; Chris P. Ponting; Gerton Lunter; Saneyuki Higashino; Asger Hobolth; Julien Y. Dutheil; Emre Karakoc; Can Alkan; Saba Sajjadian; Claudia Rita Catacchio; Mario Ventura; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Evan E. Eichler; Claudine André; Rebeca Atencia; Lawrence Mugisha; Jörg Junhold; Nick Patterson

Two African apes are the closest living relatives of humans: the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and the bonobo (Pan paniscus). Although they are similar in many respects, bonobos and chimpanzees differ strikingly in key social and sexual behaviours, and for some of these traits they show more similarity with humans than with each other. Here we report the sequencing and assembly of the bonobo genome to study its evolutionary relationship with the chimpanzee and human genomes. We find that more than three per cent of the human genome is more closely related to either the bonobo or the chimpanzee genome than these are to each other. These regions allow various aspects of the ancestry of the two ape species to be reconstructed. In addition, many of the regions that overlap genes may eventually help us understand the genetic basis of phenotypes that humans share with one of the two apes to the exclusion of the other.


Genome Research | 2013

DNA methylation contributes to natural human variation

Holger Heyn; Sebastian Moran; Irene Hernando-Herraez; Sergi Sayols; Antonio Gomez; Juan Sandoval; Dave Monk; Kenichiro Hata; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Liewei Wang; Manel Esteller

DNA methylation patterns are important for establishing cell, tissue, and organism phenotypes, but little is known about their contribution to natural human variation. To determine their contribution to variability, we have generated genome-scale DNA methylation profiles of three human populations (Caucasian-American, African-American, and Han Chinese-American) and examined the differentially methylated CpG sites. The distinctly methylated genes identified suggest an influence of DNA methylation on phenotype differences, such as susceptibility to certain diseases and pathogens, and response to drugs and environmental agents. DNA methylation differences can be partially traced back to genetic variation, suggesting that differentially methylated CpG sites serve as evolutionarily established mediators between the genetic code and phenotypic variability. Notably, one-third of the DNA methylation differences were not associated with any genetic variation, suggesting that variation in population-specific sites takes place at the genetic and epigenetic levels, highlighting the contribution of epigenetic modification to natural human variation.

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Lukas F. K. Kuderna

Barcelona Biomedical Research Park

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Oscar Ramirez

Spanish National Research Council

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