TY - JOUR
T1 - Genomes of critically endangered saola are shaped by population structure and purging
AU - Garcia-Erill, Genís
AU - Liu, Shanlin
AU - Le, Minh Duc
AU - Hurley, Martha M.
AU - Nguyen, Hung Dinh
AU - Nguyen, Dzung Quoc
AU - Nguyen, Dzung Huy
AU - Santander, Cindy G.
AU - Sánchez Barreiro, Fátima
AU - Gomes Martins, Nuno Filipe
AU - Hanghøj, Kristian
AU - Salleh, Faezah Mohd
AU - Ramos-Madrigal, Jazmín
AU - Wang, Xi
AU - Sinding, Mikkel Holger S.
AU - Morales, Hernán E.
AU - Stæger, Frederik Filip
AU - Wilkinson, Nicholas
AU - Meng, Guanliang
AU - Pečnerová, Patrícia
AU - Yang, Chentao
AU - Rasmussen, Malthe Sebro
AU - Schubert, Mikkel
AU - Dunn, Robert R.
AU - Moltke, Ida
AU - Zhang, Guojie
AU - Chen, Lei
AU - Wang, Wen
AU - Cao, Trung Tien
AU - Nguyen, Ha Manh
AU - Siegismund, Hans R.
AU - Albrechtsen, Anders
AU - Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
AU - Heller, Rasmus
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The saola is one of the most elusive large mammals, standing at the brink of extinction. We constructed a reference genome and resequenced 26 saola individuals, confirming the saola as a basal member of the Bovini. Despite its small geographic range, we found that the saola is partitioned into two populations with high genetic differentiation (FST = 0.49). We estimate that these populations diverged and started declining 5,000–20,000 years ago, possibly due to climate changes and exacerbated by increasing human activities. The saola has long tracts without genomic diversity; however, most of these tracts are not shared by the two populations. Saolas carry a high genetic load, yet their gradual decline resulted in the purging of the most deleterious genetic variation. Finally, we find that combining the two populations, e.g., in an eventual captive breeding program, would mitigate the genetic load and increase the odds of species survival.
AB - The saola is one of the most elusive large mammals, standing at the brink of extinction. We constructed a reference genome and resequenced 26 saola individuals, confirming the saola as a basal member of the Bovini. Despite its small geographic range, we found that the saola is partitioned into two populations with high genetic differentiation (FST = 0.49). We estimate that these populations diverged and started declining 5,000–20,000 years ago, possibly due to climate changes and exacerbated by increasing human activities. The saola has long tracts without genomic diversity; however, most of these tracts are not shared by the two populations. Saolas carry a high genetic load, yet their gradual decline resulted in the purging of the most deleterious genetic variation. Finally, we find that combining the two populations, e.g., in an eventual captive breeding program, would mitigate the genetic load and increase the odds of species survival.
KW - conservation genomics
KW - degraded DNA
KW - evolutionary genomics
KW - genetic rescue
KW - phylogenomics
KW - saola
KW - zoology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004399666&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.cell.2025.03.040
DO - 10.1016/j.cell.2025.03.040
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105004399666
SN - 0092-8674
JO - Cell
JF - Cell
ER -