Litcius/Paper detail

What Have We Learned from the First 500 Avian Genomes?

Gustavo A. Bravo, Charlotte Schmitt, Scott V. Edwards

2021Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics83 citationsDOI

Abstract

The increased capacity of DNA sequencing has significantly advanced our understanding of the phylogeny of birds and the proximate and ultimate mechanisms molding their genomic diversity. In less than a decade, the number of available avian reference genomes has increased to over 500—approximately 5% of bird diversity—placing birds in a privileged position to advance the fields of phylogenomics and comparative, functional, and population genomics. Whole-genome sequence data, as well as indels and rare genomic changes, are further resolving the avian tree of life. The accumulation of bird genomes, increasingly with long-read sequence data, greatly improves the resolution of genomic features such as germline-restricted chromosomes and the W chromosome, and is facilitating the comparative integration of genotypes and phenotypes. Community-based initiatives such as the Bird 10,000 Genomes Project and Vertebrate Genome Project are playing a fundamental role in amplifying and coalescing a vibrant international program in avian comparative genomics.

Topics & Concepts

GenomeBiologyComparative genomicsGenomicsEvolutionary biologyIndelPhylogenomicsReference genomePopulation genomicsDNA sequencingMicrochromosomeWhole genome sequencingGeneticsPopulationPhylogeneticsComputational biologyChromosomeCladeGeneGenotypeKaryotypeDemographySingle-nucleotide polymorphismSociologyChromosomal and Genetic VariationsGenetic diversity and population structurePaleontology and Evolutionary Biology