Centromeric transposable elements and epigenetic status drive karyotypic variation in the eastern hoolock gibbon

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 Aug 30:2024.08.29.610280. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.29.610280.

Abstract

Great apes have maintained a stable karyotype with few large-scale rearrangements; in contrast, gibbons have undergone a high rate of chromosomal rearrangements coincident with rapid centromere turnover. Here we characterize assembled centromeres in the Eastern hoolock gibbon, Hoolock leuconedys (HLE), finding a diverse group of transposable elements (TEs) that differ from the canonical alpha satellites found across centromeres of other apes. We find that HLE centromeres contain a CpG methylation centromere dip region, providing evidence this epigenetic feature is conserved in the absence of satellite arrays; nevertheless, we report a variety of atypical centromeric features, including protein-coding genes and mismatched replication timing. Further, large structural variations define HLE centromeres and distinguish them from other gibbons. Combined with differentially methylated TEs, topologically associated domain boundaries, and segmental duplications at chromosomal breakpoints, we propose that a "perfect storm" of multiple genomic attributes with propensities for chromosome instability shaped gibbon centromere evolution.

Keywords: centromeres; chromosome evolution; genome assembly; gibbons; methylation; primate genomics; replication timing; transposable elements.

Publication types

  • Preprint