Identification of ancient viruses from metagenomic data of the Jomon people
Autor: | Ryota Sugimoto, Ken-ichi Shinoda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Hideaki Kanzawa-Kiriyama, Luca Nishimura, Jun Inoue, Ituro Inoue |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
education.field_of_study Phylogenetic tree Population Sequence assembly 030105 genetics & heredity Biology Genome 03 medical and health sciences Complete sequence 030104 developmental biology Ancient DNA Metagenomics Evolutionary biology Viral evolution Genetics education Genetics (clinical) |
Zdroj: | Journal of Human Genetics. 66:287-296 |
ISSN: | 1435-232X 1434-5161 |
Popis: | Ancient DNA studies provide genomic information about the origins, population structures, and physical characteristics of ancient humans that cannot be solely examined by archeological studies. The DNAs extracted from ancient human bones, teeth, or tissues are often contaminated with coexisting bacterial and viral genomes that contain DNA from ancient microbes infecting those of ancient humans. Information on ancient viral genomes is useful in making inferences about the viral evolution. Here, we have utilized metagenomic sequencing data from the dental pulp of five Jomon individuals, who lived on the Japanese archipelago more than 3000 years ago; this is to detect ancient viral genomes. We conducted de novo assembly of the non-human reads where we have obtained 277,387 contigs that were longer than 1000 bp. These contigs were subjected to homology searches against a collection of modern viral genome sequences. We were able to detect eleven putative ancient viral genomes. Among them, we reconstructed the complete sequence of the Siphovirus contig89 (CT89) viral genome. The Jomon CT89-like sequence was determined to contain 59 open reading frames, among which five genes known to encode phage proteins were under strong purifying selection. The host of CT89 was predicted to be Schaalia meyeri, a bacterium residing in the human oral cavity. Finally, the CT89 phylogenetic tree showed two clusters, from both of which the Jomon sequence was separated. Our results suggest that metagenomic information from the dental pulp of the Jomon people is essential in retrieving ancient viral genomes used to examine their evolution. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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