Meiotic genes are enriched in regions of reduced archaic ancestry

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Abstract

About 1-6% of the genetic ancestry of modern humans today originates from admixture with archaic humans. It has recently been shown that autosomal genomic regions with a reduced proportion of Neanderthal and Denisovan ancestries (NAandDA) are significantly enriched in genes that aremore expressed in testis than in other tissues. To determine whether a cellular segregation pattern would exist, we combined maps of archaic introgression with a cross-analysis of three transcriptomic datasets deciphering the transcriptional landscape of human gonadal cell types. We reveal that the regions deficient in both NA and DA contain a significant enrichment of genes transcribed in meiotic germ cells. The interbreeding of anatomically modern humans with archaic humans may have introduced archaic-derived alleles that contributed to genetic incompatibilities affecting meiosis that were subsequently purged by natural selection.

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Jégou, B., Sankararaman, S., Rolland, A. D., Reich, D., & Chalmel, F. (2017). Meiotic genes are enriched in regions of reduced archaic ancestry. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 34(8), 1974–1980. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msx141

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