Date: 25/02/2017 11:17:44
From: dv
ID: 1030232
Subject: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

The DNA of a mid-Pleistocene equid, dated roughly 700000 years before present, has been sequenced. This is by far the oldest DNA sequenced.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23803765

The rich fossil record of equids has made them a model for evolutionary processes. Here we present a 1.12-times coverage draft genome from a horse bone recovered from permafrost dated to approximately 560-780 thousand years before present (kyr BP). Our data represent the oldest full genome sequence determined so far by almost an order of magnitude. For comparison, we sequenced the genome of a Late Pleistocene horse (43 kyr BP), and modern genomes of five domestic horse breeds (Equus ferus caballus), a Przewalski’s horse (E. f. przewalskii) and a donkey (E. asinus). Our analyses suggest that the Equus lineage giving rise to all contemporary horses, zebras and donkeys originated 4.0-4.5 million years before present (Myr BP), twice the conventionally accepted time to the most recent common ancestor of the genus Equus. We also find that horse population size fluctuated multiple times over the past 2 Myr, particularly during periods of severe climatic changes. We estimate that the Przewalski’s and domestic horse populations diverged 38-72 kyr BP, and find no evidence of recent admixture between the domestic horse breeds and the Przewalski’s horse investigated. This supports the contention that Przewalski’s horses represent the last surviving wild horse population. We find similar levels of genetic variation among Przewalski’s and domestic populations, indicating that the former are genetically viable and worthy of conservation efforts. We also find evidence for continuous selection on the immune system and olfaction throughout horse evolution. Finally, we identify 29 genomic regions among horse breeds that deviate from neutrality and show low levels of genetic variation compared to the Przewalski’s horse. Such regions could correspond to loci selected early during domestication.

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Date: 25/02/2017 11:20:24
From: Ian
ID: 1030235
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

That was no horse

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Date: 25/02/2017 11:21:50
From: dv
ID: 1030238
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

Yeah but if I put “equid” in the subject line people will think this is about some kind of new electronic currency.

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Date: 25/02/2017 11:30:22
From: Ian
ID: 1030240
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

dv said:


Yeah but if I put “equid” in the subject line people will think this is about some kind of new electronic currency.

:)

No, that’s near enough. I was thinking that we were in proto-horse territory..

“it appears the genus Equus evolved from a Dinohippus-like ancestor ~4–7 mya”

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Date: 25/02/2017 12:40:23
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1030265
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

Ian said:


That was no horse

700000 years is borderline for species development. Some species are much younger and some species are much older. Deciding where to draw the line with fossils is largely arbitrary.

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Date: 25/02/2017 12:44:14
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1030266
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

> Here we present a 1.12-times coverage

1.12 times coverage is pathetic for a living species, I’d want to see 3 to 5 times coverage. But for an extinct animal of that vintage it’s startlingly good.

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Date: 25/02/2017 12:45:27
From: Ian
ID: 1030267
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

mollwollfumble said:


Ian said:

That was no horse

700000 years is borderline for species development. Some species are much younger and some species are much older. Deciding where to draw the line with fossils is largely arbitrary.

That’s what I implied with my next post.

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Date: 25/02/2017 12:48:39
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1030268
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

> We also find that horse population size fluctuated multiple times over the past 2 Myr, particularly during periods of severe climatic changes.

You can’t tell that by just comparing a 700000 year, 43000 year and modern horses and donkeys. Afaik.

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Date: 25/02/2017 13:00:49
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1030271
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

Humour warning.

“Recalibrating Equus evolution using the genome sequence of an early Middle Plasticine horse.”

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Date: 25/02/2017 13:39:33
From: dv
ID: 1030289
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

mollwollfumble said:


Humour warning.

“Recalibrating Equus evolution using the genome sequence of an early Middle Plasticine horse.”


rdrr

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Date: 25/02/2017 13:41:17
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1030291
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

The earliest known horse ancestor (Eohippus) dates back to over 50 million years ago. A relatively small animal to around 1/2 metre in height.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eohippus

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Date: 25/02/2017 13:42:44
From: dv
ID: 1030292
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

PermeateFree said:


The earliest known horse ancestor (Eohippus) dates back to over 50 million years ago.

The earliest known horse ancestor dates back around 3.7 billion years.

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Date: 25/02/2017 13:45:26
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1030293
Subject: re: ~700000 year old horse sequenced

dv said:


PermeateFree said:

The earliest known horse ancestor (Eohippus) dates back to over 50 million years ago.

The earliest known horse ancestor dates back around 3.7 billion years.

Didn’t have 4 legs though.

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