Panagrolaimus kolymaensis, a nematode resurrected from Siberian permafrost laid dormant for 46,000 years
Genome analysis shows new nematode species shares molecular toolkit for survival with C. elegans
A soil nematode reanimated from Siberian permafrost had laid dormant for approximately 46,000 years, according to a study publishing July 27, 2023 in the open access journal PLOS Genetics by Anastasia Shatilovich at the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science RAS in Russia, Vamshidhar Gade at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Germany, and colleagues.
General morphology of P. kolymaensis, female. Scanning electron pictures (A, C), light microscopy photographs (E, F) and graphic presentations (B, D, G) of holotype: A, B) entire body, C, D) anterior ends, E) anterior body, F) perivulvar body region, G) tail. Abbreviations: l.f.–lateral field, ov–ovary, pro–procorpus of the pharynx, t.b.–terminal bulb of the pharynx, u–uterus with eggs, v–vulva, v.p.–ventral pore. Scale bars: A, D, E, F, G– 20 μm, B– 100 μm, C– 2 μm. Shatilovich et al, 2023, PLOS Genetics, CC-BY 4.0
Some animals, such as tardigrades, rotifers, and nematodes, can survive harsh conditions by entering a dormant state known as “cryptobiosis”. Previously, nematode individuals were reanimated from samples collected from a fossilized burrow in silt deposits in the northeastern Arctic. In this study, radiocarbon analysis of plant material from the burrow revealed that these frozen deposits, 40 meters below the surface, had not thawed since the late Pleistocene, between 45,839 and 47,769 years ago.
Using genome sequencing, assembly, and phylogenetic analysis of the nematode’s relationship to modern species, the researchers determined that it belongs to a previously undescribed species, Panagrolaimus kolymaensis. They compared its genome with the model organism, Caenorhabditis elegans, and identified genes in common that are involved in cryptobiosis. When mildly desiccated in the laboratory, both species increased production of a sugar called trehalose, which may help them to survive harsh desiccation and freezing. They tested the survival capabilities of P. kolymaensis and found that exposure to mild desiccation before freezing helped prepare the worms for cryptobiosis and improved survival at -80°C. This treatment also benefitted C. elegans dauer larvae, which then survived 480 days at -80°C with no reductions in viability or reproduction after thawing.
This study extends the longest reported cryptobiosis in nematodes by tens of thousands of years. By adapting to cope with extreme conditions, such as permafrost, for short periods of time, the nematodes might have gained the potential to remain dormant over geological timescales.
The authors add, “This work also suggests that fluctuations in the environment also determine the time an organism can remain in a cryptobiotic state.”
Bibliographic information:
Shatilovich A, Gade VR, Pippel M, Hoffmeyer TT, Tchesunov AV, Stevens L, et al. (2023) A novel nematode species from the Siberian permafrost shares adaptive mechanisms for cryptobiotic survival with C. elegans dauer larva. PLoS Genet 19(7): e1010798. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010798
Woolly mammoths evolved smaller ears and woolier coats over the 700,000 years that they roamed the Siberian steppes; the study has been published in the journal Current Biology
A team of researchers compared the genomes of woolly mammoths with modern day elephants to find out what made woolly mammoths unique, both as individuals and as a species. The investigators report April 7 in the journal Current Biology that many of the woolly mammoth’s trademark features—including their woolly coats and large fat deposits—were already genetically encoded in the earliest woolly mammoths, but these and other traits became more defined over the species’ 700,000+ year existence. They also identified a gene with several mutations that may have been responsible for the woolly mammoth’s miniscule ears.
“We wanted to know what makes a mammoth a woolly mammoth,” says paleogeneticist and first author David Díez-del-Molino (@indianadiez) of the Centre for Palaeogenetics in Stockholm. “Woolly mammoths have some very characteristic morphological features, like their thick fur and small ears, that you obviously expect based on what frozen specimens look like, but there are also many other adaptations like fat metabolism and cold perception that are not so evident because they’re at the molecular level.”
To identify genes that were “highly evolved” in woolly mammoths— meaning they had accrued a large number of mutations—the team compared the genomes of 23 Siberian woolly mammoth with 28 modern-day Asian and African elephant genomes. Twenty-two of these woolly mammoths were relatively modern, having lived within the past 100,000 years, and sixteen of the genomes had not been previously sequenced. The twenty-third woolly mammoth genome belonged to one of the oldest known woolly mammoths, Chukochya, who lived approximately 700,000 years ago.
“Having the Chukochya genome allowed us to identify a number of genes that evolved during the lifespan of the woolly mammoth as a species,” says senior author Love Dalén (@love_dalen), professor of evolutionary genomics at the Centre for Palaeogenetics in Stockholm. “This allows us to study evolution in real time, and we can say these specific mutations are unique to woolly mammoths, and they didn’t exist in its ancestors.”
Not surprisingly, many genes that were adaptive for woolly mammoths are related to living in cold environments. Some of these genes are shared by unrelated modern-day Arctic mammals.
“We found some highly evolved genes related to fat metabolism and storage that are also found in other Arctic species like reindeer and polar bears, which means there’s probably convergent evolution for these genes in cold-adapted mammals,” says Díez-del-Molino.
While previous studies have looked at the genomes of one or two woolly mammoths, this is the first comparison of a large number of mammoth genomes. This large sample size enabled the team to identify genes that were common among all woolly mammoths, and therefore likely adaptive, as opposed to genetic mutations that might only have been present in a single individual.
“We found that some of the genes that were previously thought to be special for woolly mammoths are actually variable between mammoths, which means they probably weren’t as important,” says Díez-del-Molino.
Overall, the 700,000-year-old Chukochya genome shared approximately 91.7% of the mutations that caused protein-coding changes in the more modern woolly mammoths. This means that many of the woolly mammoth’s defining traits—including thick fur, fat metabolism, and cold-perception abilities—were probably already present when the woolly mammoth first diverged from its ancestor, the steppe mammoth.
However, these traits developed further in Chukochya’s descendants.
“The very earliest woolly mammoths weren’t fully evolved,” says Dalén “They possibly had larger ears, and their wool was different—perhaps less insulating and fluffy compared to later woolly mammoths.”
More modern woolly mammoths also had several immune mutations in T cell antigens that were not seen in their ancestor. The authors speculate that these mutations may have conferred enhanced cell-mediated immunity in response to emerging viral pathogens.
Working with ancient mammoth DNA comes with a slew of hurdles. “Every step of the way, things are a bit more difficult, from fieldwork, to lab work, to bioinformatics,” says Díez-del-Molino.
“Apart from the field work, where we have to battle both polar bears and mosquitos, another aspect that makes this much more difficult is that you have to work in an ancient DNA laboratory, and that means that you have to dress up in this full-body suit with a hood and face mask and visor and double gloves, so doing the lab work is rather uncomfortable to put it mildly,” says Dalén. “I would like to highlight Marianne Dehasque, the second author of this paper, who did the herculean effort of performing lab work on most of these samples.”
All the mammoths whose genomes were included in this study were collected in Siberia, but the researchers hope to branch out and compare North American woolly mammoths in the future. “We showed a couple of years ago that there was gene flow between woolly mammoths and the ancestors of Colombian mammoths, so that’s something that we will need to account for because North American woolly mammoths might have been carrying non-woolly mammoth genes as well,” says Dalén.
Woolly mammoths evolved smaller ears and woolier coats while in the Siberian steppes. Gallery
1 A permafrost-preserved foot of a woolly mammoth discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
2 The ear and part of skin from a woolly mammoth. This specimen (with sample ID: YakInf) is one of the mammoths included in the paper, and yielded the highest quality mammoth genome ever sequenced. The specimen was discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
3 Hind legs from the Yuka mammoth, whose genome was included in the analyses (sample ID: YaK39.1K). The Yuka mammoth was discovered in northern Siberia in 2010 (photo by Love Dalén)
4 A permafrost-preserved foot of a woolly mammoth discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
5 The tusk of a woolly mammoth, from which the authors sequenced the entire genome. The tusk (sample ID: Chu17.6K) was discovered in northeastern Siberia in 2015 and has been radiocarbon dated to ca 18,000 years before present (photo by Love Dalén)
6 Woolly fur from the Yuka mammoth (photo by Love Dalén)
7 Footpad and fur from the Yuka mammoth (photo by Love Dalén)
8 Woolly mammoth tusk (same tusk as in P5) discovered in northeastern Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
9 Study co-author Love Dalén with the Yuka mammoth (see P3 for details; photo by Ian Watts)
10 Study co-author Marianne Dehasque working in the ancient DNA lab at the Centre for Palaeogenetics in Stockholm (photo by Jens Lasthein)
11 The molar tooth of a young female mammoth discovered in northeastern Siberia in 2015. The genome from this specimen (sample ID: Chu29.1K) was included in the study (photo by Peter Mortensen)
1 A permafrost-preserved foot of a woolly mammoth discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
2 The ear and part of skin from a woolly mammoth. This specimen (with sample ID: YakInf) is one of the mammoths included in the paper, and yielded the highest quality mammoth genome ever sequenced. The specimen was discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
3 Hind legs from the Yuka mammoth, whose genome was included in the analyses (sample ID: YaK39.1K). The Yuka mammoth was discovered in northern Siberia in 2010 (photo by Love Dalén)
4 A permafrost-preserved foot of a woolly mammoth discovered in 2018 by the Indigirka river in Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
5 The tusk of a woolly mammoth, from which the authors sequenced the entire genome. The tusk (sample ID: Chu17.6K) was discovered in northeastern Siberia in 2015 and has been radiocarbon dated to ca 18,000 years before present (photo by Love Dalén)
6 Woolly fur from the Yuka mammoth (photo by Love Dalén)
7 Footpad and fur from the Yuka mammoth (photo by Love Dalén)
8 Woolly mammoth tusk (same tusk as in P5) discovered in northeastern Siberia (photo by Love Dalén)
9 Study co-author Love Dalén with the Yuka mammoth (see P3 for details; photo by Ian Watts)
10 Study co-author Marianne Dehasque working in the ancient DNA lab at the Centre for Palaeogenetics in Stockholm (photo by Jens Lasthein)
11 The molar tooth of a young female mammoth discovered in northeastern Siberia in 2015. The genome from this specimen (sample ID: Chu29.1K) was included in the study (photo by Peter Mortensen)
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This research was supported by the Swedish Research Council, FORMAS, the Carl Tryggers Foundation, the SciLifeLab, the Wallenberg Data Driven Life Science Program, the Wallenberg Academy, and the Russian Science Foundation.