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Dive into the research topics where Xuming Zhou is active.

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Featured researches published by Xuming Zhou.


Systematic Biology | 2012

Phylogenomic analysis resolves the interordinal relationships and rapid diversification of the Laurasiatherian mammals

Xuming Zhou; Shixia Xu; Junxiao Xu; Bingyao Chen; Kaiya Zhou; Guang Yang

Abstract Although great progress has been made in resolving the relationships of placental mammals, the position of several clades in Laurasiatheria remain controversial. In this study, we performed a phylogenetic analysis of 97 orthologs (46,152 bp) for 15 taxa, representing all laurasiatherian orders. Additionally, phylogenetic trees of laurasiatherian mammals with draft genome sequences were reconstructed based on 1608 exons (2,175,102 bp). Our reconstructions resolve the interordinal relationships within Laurasiatheria and corroborate the clades Scrotifera, Fereuungulata, and Cetartiodactyla. Furthermore, we tested alternative topologies within Laurasiatheria, and among alternatives for the phylogenetic position of Perissodactyla, a sister-group relationship with Cetartiodactyla receives the highest support. Thus, Pegasoferae (Perissodactyla + Carnivora + Pholidota + Chiroptera) does not appear to be a natural group. Divergence time estimates from these genes were compared with published estimates for splits within Laurasiatheria. Our estimates were similar to those of several studies and suggest that the divergences among these orders occurred within just a few million years.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Whole-genome sequencing of the snub-nosed monkey provides insights into folivory and evolutionary history

Xuming Zhou; Boshi Wang; Qi Pan; Jinbo Zhang; Sudhir Kumar; Xiaoqing Sun; Zhijin Liu; Huijuan Pan; Yu Lin; Guangjian Liu; Wei Zhan; Mingzhou Li; Baoping Ren; Xingyong Ma; Hang Ruan; Chen Cheng; Dawei Wang; Fanglei Shi; Yuanyuan Hui; Yujing Tao; Chenglin Zhang; Pingfen Zhu; Zuo-Fu Xiang; Wenkai Jiang; Jiang Chang; Hailong Wang; Zhisheng Cao; Zhi Jiang; Baoguo Li; Guang Yang

Colobines are a unique group of Old World monkeys that principally eat leaves and seeds rather than fruits and insects. We report the sequencing at 146× coverage, de novo assembly and analyses of the genome of a male golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana) and resequencing at 30× coverage of three related species (Rhinopithecus bieti, Rhinopithecus brelichi and Rhinopithecus strykeri). Comparative analyses showed that Asian colobines have an enhanced ability to derive energy from fatty acids and to degrade xenobiotics. We found evidence for functional evolution in the colobine RNASE1 gene, encoding a key secretory RNase that digests the high concentrations of bacterial RNA derived from symbiotic microflora. Demographic reconstructions indicated that the profile of ancient effective population sizes for R. roxellana more closely resembles that of giant panda rather than its congeners. These findings offer new insights into the dietary adaptations and evolutionary history of colobine primates.


Nature Communications | 2013

Baiji genomes reveal low genetic variability and new insights into secondary aquatic adaptations

Xuming Zhou; Fengming Sun; Shixia Xu; Guangyi Fan; Kangli Zhu; Xin Liu; Yuan Chen; Chengcheng Shi; Yunxia Yang; Zhiyong Huang; Jing Chen; Haolong Hou; Xuejiang Guo; Wenbin Chen; Yuefeng Chen; Xiaohong Wang; Tian Lv; Dan Yang; Jiajian Zhou; Bangqing Huang; Zhengfei Wang; Wei Zhao; Ran Tian; Zhiqiang Xiong; Junxiao Xu; Xinming Liang; Bingyao Chen; Weiqing Liu; Wang J; Shengkai Pan

The baiji, or Yangtze River dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer), is a flagship species for the conservation of aquatic animals and ecosystems in the Yangtze River of China; however, this species has now been recognized as functionally extinct. Here we report a high-quality draft genome and three re-sequenced genomes of L. vexillifer using Illumina short-read sequencing technology. Comparative genomic analyses reveal that cetaceans have a slow molecular clock and molecular adaptations to their aquatic lifestyle. We also find a significantly lower number of heterozygous single nucleotide polymorphisms in the baiji compared to all other mammalian genomes reported thus far. A reconstruction of the demographic history of the baiji indicates that a bottleneck occurred near the end of the last deglaciation, a time coinciding with a rapid decrease in temperature and the rise of eustatic sea level.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2011

Phylogenomic analyses and improved resolution of Cetartiodactyla

Xuming Zhou; Shixia Xu; Yunxia Yang; Kaiya Zhou; Guang Yang

The remarkable antiquity, diversity, and significance in the ecology and evolution of Cetartiodactyla have inspired numerous attempts to resolve their phylogenetic relationships. However, previous analyses based on limited samples of nuclear genes or mitochondrial DNA sequences have generated results that were either inconsistent with one another, weakly supported, or highly sensitive to analytical conditions. Here, we present strongly supported results based upon over 1.4 Mb of an aligned DNA sequence matrix from 110 single-copy nuclear protein-coding genes of 21 Cetartiodactyla species, which represent major Cetartiodactyla lineages, and three species of Perissodactyla and Carnivora as outgroups. Phylogenetic analysis of this newly developed genomic sequence data using a codon-based model and recently developed models of the rate autocorrelation resolved the phylogenetic relationships of the major cetartiodactylan lineages and of those lineages with a high degree of confidence. Cetacea was found to nest within Artiodactyla as the sister group of Hippopotamidae, and Tylopoda was corroborated as the sole base clade of Cetartiodactyla. Within Cetacea, the monophyletic status of Odontoceti relative to Mysticeti, the basal position of Physeteroidea in Odontoceti, the non-monophyly of the river dolphins, and the sister relationship between Delphinidae and Monodontidae+Phocoenidae were strongly supported. In particular, the groups of Tursiops (bottlenose dolphins) and Stenella (spotted dolphins) were validated as unnatural groups. Additionally, a very narrow time frame of ∼3 My (million years) was found for the rapid diversification of delphinids in the late Miocene, which made it difficult to resolve the phylogenetic relationships within the Delphinidae, especially for previous studies with limited data sets. The present study provides a statistically well-supported phylogenetic framework of Cetartiodactyla, which represents an important step toward ending some of the often-heated, century-long debate on their evolution.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2014

The loss of taste genes in cetaceans

Kangli Zhu; Xuming Zhou; Shixia Xu; Di Sun; Wenhua Ren; Kaiya Zhou; Guang Yang

BackgroundFive basic taste modalities, sour, sweet, bitter, salt and umami, can be distinguished by humans and are fundamental for physical and ecological adaptations in mammals. Molecular genetic studies of the receptor genes for these tastes have been conducted in terrestrial mammals; however, little is known about the evolution and adaptation of these genes in marine mammals.ResultsHere, all five basic taste modalities, sour, sweet, bitter, salt and umami, were investigated in cetaceans. The sequence characteristics and evolutionary analyses of taste receptor genes suggested that nearly all cetaceans may have lost all taste modalities except for that of salt.ConclusionsThis is the first study to comprehensively examine the five basic taste modalities in cetaceans with extensive taxa sampling. Our results suggest that cetaceans have lost four of the basic taste modalities including sour, sweet, umami, and most of the ability to sense bitter tastes. The integrity of the candidate salt taste receptor genes in all the cetaceans examined may be because of their function in Na+ reabsorption, which is key to osmoregulation and aquatic adaptation.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2012

Positive selection at the ASPM gene coincides with brain size enlargements in cetaceans

Shixia Xu; Yuan Chen; Yuefeng Cheng; Dan Yang; Xuming Zhou; Junxiao Xu; Kaiya Zhou; Guang Yang

The enlargement of cetacean brain size represents an enigmatic event in mammalian evolution, yet its genetic basis remains poorly explored. One candidate gene associated with brain size evolution is the abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated (ASPM), as mutations in this gene cause severe reductions in the cortical size of humans. Here, we investigated the ASPM gene in representative cetacean lineages and previously published sequences from other mammals to test whether the expansion of the cetacean brain matched adaptive ASPM evolution patterns. Our analyses yielded significant evidence of positive selection on the ASPM gene during cetacean evolution, especially for the Odontoceti and Delphinoidea lineages. These molecular patterns were associated with two major events of relative brain size enlargement in odontocetes and delphinoids. It is of particular interest to find that positive selection was restricted to cetaceans and primates, two distant lineages both characterized by a massive expansion of brain size. This result is suggestive of convergent molecular evolution, although no site-specific convergence at the amino acid level was found.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2013

Adaptive evolution of the osmoregulation-related genes in cetaceans during secondary aquatic adaptation

Shixia Xu; Yunxia Yang; Xuming Zhou; Junxiao Xu; Kaiya Zhou; Guang Yang

BackgroundOsmoregulation was a primary challenge for cetaceans during the evolutionary transition from a terrestrial to a mainly hyperosmotic environment. Several physiological mechanisms have been suggested to maintain the water and salt balance in cetaceans, but their genetic and evolutionary bases remain poorly explored. The current study investigated the genes involved in osmoregulation in cetaceans and compared them with their counterparts in terrestrial mammals to test whether adaptive evolution occurred during secondary aquatic adaptation.ResultsThe present study analyzed the molecular evolution of 11 osmoregulation-related genes in 11 cetacean species, which represented all of the major cetacean clades. The results demonstrated positive selection acting on angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), angiotensinogen (AGT), SLC14A2, and aquaporin 2 (AQP2). This evidence for the positive selection of AQP2 and SLC14A2 suggests that the adaptive evolution of these genes has helped to enhance the capacity for water and urea transport, thereby leading to the concentration of urine, which is an efficient mechanism for maintaining the water balance. By contrast, a series of positively selected amino acid residues identified in the ACE and AGT (two key members of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, RAAS) proteins of cetaceans suggests that RAAS might have been adapted to maintain the water and salt balance in response to a hyperosmotic environment. Radical amino acid changes in positively selected sites were distributed among most internal and terminal branches of the cetacean phylogeny, which suggests the pervasively adaptive evolution of osmoregulation since the origin of cetaceans and their subsequent diversification.ConclusionsThis is the first comprehensive analysis of the molecular evolution of osmoregulation-related genes in cetaceans in response to selection pressure from a generally hyperosmotic environment. Four genes, i.e., AQP2, SLC14A2, ACE, and AGT were subject to positive selection in cetaceans, which suggests that cetaceans may have adapted to maintain their water and salt balance. This also suggests that cetaceans may have evolved an effective and complex mechanism for osmoregulation.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2016

Population genomics reveals low genetic diversity and adaptation to hypoxia in snub-nosed monkeys

Xuming Zhou; Xuehong Meng; Zhijin Liu; Jiang Chang; Boshi Wang; Mingzhou Li; Pablo Orozco Ter Wengel; Shilin Tian; Changlong Wen; Ziming Wang; Paul A. Garber; Huijuan Pan; Xinping Ye; Zuo-Fu Xiang; Michael William Bruford; Scott V. Edwards; Yinchuan Cao; Shuancang Yu; Lianju Gao; Zhisheng Cao; Guangjian Liu; Baoping Ren; Fanglei Shi; Zalán Péterfi; Dayong Li; Baoguo Li; Zhi Jiang; Junsheng Li; Vadim N. Gladyshev; Ruiqiang Li

Snub-nosed monkeys (genus Rhinopithecus) are a group of endangered colobines endemic to South Asia. Here, we re-sequenced the whole genomes of 38 snub-nosed monkeys representing four species within this genus. By conducting population genomic analyses, we observed a similar load of deleterious variation in snub-nosed monkeys living in both smaller and larger populations and found that genomic diversity was lower than that reported in other primates. Reconstruction of Rhinopithecus evolutionary history suggested that episodes of climatic variation over the past 2 million years, associated with glacial advances and retreats and population isolation, have shaped snub-nosed monkey demography and evolution. We further identified several hypoxia-related genes under selection in R. bieti (black snub-nosed monkey), a species that exploits habitats higher than any other nonhuman primate. These results provide the first detailed and comprehensive genomic insights into genetic diversity, demography, genetic burden, and adaptation in this radiation of endangered primates.


Journal of Crystal Growth | 2002

Nanodiamond formation by hot-filament chemical vapor deposition on carbon ions bombarded Si

Mengzhou Liao; Xiangsheng Meng; Xuming Zhou; Junqing Hu; Z.G. Wang

Nanocrystalline diamond films were grown by a two-step process on Si(1 0 0) substrate, which was first pretreated by pure carbon ions bombardment. The bombarded Si substrate was then transformed into a hot-filament chemical vapor deposition (HFCVD) system for further growth. Using the usual CH4/H-3 feed gas ratio for micro crystalline diamond growth, nanodiamond crystallites were obtained. The diamond nucleation density is comparable to that obtained by biasing the substrate. The uniformly distributed lattice damage is proposed to be responsible for the formation of the nanodiamond


Genome Research | 2017

Comprehensive variation discovery and recovery of missing sequence in the pig genome using multiple de novo assemblies

Mingzhou Li; Lei Chen; Shilin Tian; Yu Lin; Qianzi Tang; Xuming Zhou; Diyan Li; Carol K L Yeung; Tiandong Che; Long Jin; Yuhua Fu; Jideng Ma; Xun Wang; Anan Jiang; Jing Lan; Qi Pan; Yingkai Liu; Zonggang Luo; Zongyi Guo; Haifeng Liu; Li Zhu; Surong Shuai; Guoqing Tang; Jiugang Zhao; Yanzhi Jiang; Lin Bai; Shunhua Zhang; Miaomiao Mai; Changchun Li; Dawei Wang

Uncovering genetic variation through resequencing is limited by the fact that only sequences with similarity to the reference genome are examined. Reference genomes are often incomplete and cannot represent the full range of genetic diversity as a result of geographical divergence and independent demographic events. To more comprehensively characterize genetic variation of pigs (Sus scrofa), we generated de novo assemblies of nine geographically and phenotypically representative pigs from Eurasia. By comparing them to the reference pig assembly, we uncovered a substantial number of novel SNPs and structural variants, as well as 137.02-Mb sequences harboring 1737 protein-coding genes that were absent in the reference assembly, revealing variants left by selection. Our results illustrate the power of whole-genome de novo sequencing relative to resequencing and provide valuable genetic resources that enable effective use of pigs in both agricultural production and biomedical research.

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Guang Yang

Nanjing Normal University

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Shixia Xu

Nanjing Normal University

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Kaiya Zhou

Nanjing Normal University

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Vadim N. Gladyshev

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Mingzhou Li

Sichuan Agricultural University

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Shilin Tian

Sichuan Agricultural University

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Junxiao Xu

Nanjing Normal University

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Ming Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhijin Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Boshi Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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