• Slew Woh Choo
  • Tze King Tan
  • Ranjeev Hari
  • Wei Yee Wee
  • Andrey A. Yurchenko
  • Agostinho Antunes
  • Richard K. Wilson
  • Wesley C. Warren
  • Klaus-Peter Koepfli
  • Patrick Minx
  • Ksenia Krasheninnikova
  • Antoinette Kotze
  • Desire L. Dalton
  • Elaine Vermaak
  • Ian C. Paterson
  • Frankie Thomas Sitam
  • Jeffrine J. Rovie-Ryan
  • Warren E. Johnson
  • Aini Mohamed Yusoff
  • Shu-Jin Luo
  • Kayal Vizi Karuppannan
  • Gang Fang
  • Deyou Zheng
  • Mark B. Gerstein
  • Leonard Lipovich
  • Guat Jah Wong
Pangolins, unique mammals with scales over most of their body, no teeth, poor vision, and an acute olfactory system, comprise the only placental order (Pholidota) without a whole-genome map. To investigate pangolin biology and evolution, we developed genome assemblies of the Malayan (Manis javanica) and Chinese (M. pentadactyla) pangolins. Strikingly, we found that interferon epsilon (IFNE), exclusively expressed in epithelial cells and important in skin and mucosal immunity, is pseudogenized in all African and Asian pangolin species that we examined, perhaps impacting resistance to infection. We propose that scale development was an innovation that provided protection against injuries or stress and reduced pangolin vulnerability to infection. Further evidence of specialized adaptations was evident from positively selected genes involving immunity-related pathways, inflammation, energy storage and metabolism, muscular and nervous systems, and scale/hair development. Olfactory receptor gene families are signif
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages11
JournalGenome Research
Volume26
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 2016

ID: 7966688