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Daily Archives: March 20, 2021
It is not a coincidence the NCAA Tournament and National Problem Gambling Awareness Month both happen in March – WVNS-TV
Posted: March 20, 2021 at 2:58 am
(WVNS) March is National Problem Gambling Awareness Month, which also happens to be during the month of the biggest college basketball games, the NCAA Tournament.
Sheila Moran is the Director of Marketing and Communication for 1-800 Gambler. She said it is not a coincidence that awareness month is in March, because they know this month is a very popular time to gamble.
According to The Problem Gambling Help Network of West Virginia at least one in 50 people in the Mountain State have a serious issue. The goal is to help address their problem, and provide solutions.
We focus a lot on prevention. We show that many people, if not most people, gamble at some point in their life, so it is important to understand the difference between recreational gambling and problem gambling and when theyve crossed that line and what to do when theyve crossed that line, Moran said.
If you know someone that needs help, 1-800-GAMBLER offers a 24 hour help line along with a 24 hour chat room. A gambler can speak to a crisis counselor and also receive free treatment for their problem.
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Have you noticed how much gambling talk there is on sports TV? How we got here – MarketWatch
Posted: at 2:58 am
During game broadcasts, announcers rarely mentioned a games odds with anything more than a wink and a nod. NFL announcer Al Michaels once referenced a play that made the games total points exceed the point spread by saying, thats over-whelming.
Fast forward to 2021, and Charles Barkley now openly discusses gambling odds during his betting segment before and after NBA games on the popular TV show Inside the NBA, which airs on TNT.
In fact, many TV broadcasts of pro sports games today feature ads from leading U.S. sportsbooks DraftKings DKNG, +6.46% or FanDuel, and odds for games are now shown on TV networks regularly.
Sports betting TV shows have also launched: ESPN DIS, -0.59% created a show dedicated to sports gambling called the Daily Wager, and CBS VIACA, +0.65% also has a gambling show called SportsLine Edge, for example. ESPN even began featuring point spreads on its famous BottomLine ticker.
How did we go from winks and nods to this in just three years?
The first domino fell in 2018 when the Supreme Court struck down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA) and took away the federal governments power to regulate sports betting. Now its up to individual states to craft their own legislation surrounding sports betting.
Early success for states like New Jersey, which had nearly $3 billion wagered in just its first year of legalized sports betting, prompted more states to pass their own sports betting legislation. Twenty states as well as Washington, D.C. now have some form of legal sports betting.
Gambling no longer feels tawdry and in the shadows, Chad Millman, CEO of betting data company Action Network, said shortly after the ban on sports betting was lifted. It has democratized information, and people are thinking opportunistically because they love sports.
Since the PASPA ban was lifted, over $45 billion has been legally wagered in the U.S., according to Legal Sports Report.
Once it was clear that sports betting had major staying power in the U.S. markets, media companies began partnering with sportsbooks. ESPN, Turner Sports and Barstool Sports signed official sportsbook partnerships and tried to steer their audiences towards betting.
Its safe to say that all the sports rights owners are trying to find new ways to engage fans, FanDuel CEO Matt King told MarketWatch.
Both ESPN and Turner own sports broadcasting rights to NBA and NFL games and members of sports talk shows like ESPNs Jalen Rose and TNTs Charles Barkley have inked endorsement deals with BetMGM MGM, +1.32% and FanDuel, respectively.
Barkley says he wagered $100,000 on the Portland Trail Blazers to make it the NBA Finals at +2800 odds during TNTs NBA game coverage.
Hey, I was thinking more about the $2.8 million, Barkley would later say, about how much money the bet could have made him.
A TV analyst talking about betting like that during a broadcast is a stark contrast from where we were a few years ago when most sports leagues were against the idea of betting on their games.
When the first seeds of sports betting legalization were being planted in 2012, the NFL was not a supporter. New Jersey was attempting to legalize sports betting at the state level with federal sports betting ban still in place.
Its a very strongly held view in the NFL it has been for decades that the threat that gambling could occur in the NFL or fixing of games or that any outcome could be influenced by the outside could be very damaging to the NFL and very difficult to ever recover from, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in 2012.
The NFL, which just signed a $110 billion media rights deal, has since moved a team to sports betting capital of the U.S. Las Vegas and has accepted a sportsbook partnership deal from Caesars CZR, -1.41%.
Heres what Goodell says now: We think that sports gambling in many ways creates a lot more engagement for our fans. It gives them another opportunity to engage with the game.
The billions added in annual revenue from legal sports betting led the NFL to allow individual teams to sell several official sportsbooks sponsorships too. Some sports teams like the New York Giants and the Washington Wizards have physical sportsbooks inside their stadiums. These successful sportsbooks famously have large quantities of cash and spend huge amount on marketing.
Leagues including the NBA, NFL and NHL have released statements saying they would prefer sports betting was federally regulated instead of regulated by states so they could charge integrity fees, a sports betting tax from the leagues at a large scale.
There are still schisms within the industry. While there are numerous TV shows, podcasts and pregame analysts talking about sports betting, its still rarely mentioned during actual game broadcasts.
Gambling is legalized in a few states now. Its not widespread across the entire country and our policy has been that in our football telecasts, including the SEC on CBS and the NFL, we dont discuss gambling information, lines, over/unders, CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus said ahead of the Super Bowl LIII. We dont do that. Thats our policy.
This is especially true for college sports, which has a more uneasy relationship with gambling than pro sports leagues. Sports betting critics will often say that game-fixing could be more prevalent in college sports because the participants are not paid, allowing bad actors to potentially sway teenagers into improperly influencing the outcome through bribes or other maneuvers.
The NCAA has released several statements in recent weeks discussing the perils of sports betting.
The 2021 NCAA March Madness basketball Tournament begins this week and is expected to see over $1 billion in total legal wagering, a record for any sporting event.
See also: Avoid these four mistakes when filling out your March Madness bracket
Multiple sources at Warner Media, the company broadcasting the March Madness Tournament, told MarketWatch that odds and lines will not be shown during this years tournament broadcasts. That includes pregame and postgame coverage.
Additionally, there will be no advertisements from sportsbooks during the games, the sources confirmed.
The 2021 tournament will take place in Indiana, a state where sports betting is legal.
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Odds against Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s reelection next year, gambling site says – New York Post
Posted: at 2:58 am
The smart money is against embattled Gov. Andrew Cuomo being reelected next year, according to one online gambling operation.
But the scandal-scarred Democrat isnt likely to call it quits and resign by the end of next month, based on odds being offered by BetOnline.ag.
The website will pay out only 1-4 on wagers that Cuomo will lose if he seeks a fourth term, compared to 5-2 that hell win.
It also puts the odds of Cuomo resigning by April 30 at 3-1, and 5-2 that he wont.
The number of bets placed so far in is the four-figure range, said the sites sportsbook manager, Dave Mason.
The online casino began encouraging customers to gamble on Cuomos likely reelection when he was first getting backlash over his handling of nursing homes amid the coronavirus pandemic, Mason said.
Those odds opened at Yes +150 [3-2]/No -200 [1-2] and the bettors hammered the No pretty fast, he said.
But, Mason added, At this point, theres no reason for us to believe hes going to step down unless President Biden asks him to.
Biden has said he will await the results of an independent investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo, but this week added that the governor will probably end up being prosecuted, too if the claims against him are confirmed.
Cuomo has repeatedly vowed not to resign but recently refused to say if hell make good on an earlier pledge to run again in 2022.
His office didnt immediately return a request for comment.
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Legal gambling not even the top story of the day back in 1931 – Las Vegas Review-Journal
Posted: at 2:58 am
Youd be hard pressed to come up with a single action that shaped the future of Nevada more than Gov. Fred B. Balzars signing of the open-gambling bill on March 19, 1931.
Nevadans didnt necessarily realize its significance at the time, though.
The wide-open gambling bill, establishing licensed gambling in all forms in the state of Nevada, was passed by the senate late this afternoon by a vote of 13-3, one not voting, read the story on the front page of the Las Vegas Evening Review and Journal on March 17.
It went on to say that the law would become effective as soon as it was signed by Balzar, although there was uncertainty as to when that would happen because he was ill at home.
The story took second billing that day to the merger of the existing Ferguson-Balcom and Las Vegas hospitals and the pending construction of a new 50-bed hospital at 12th and Stewart streets.
The following day, a story by the United Press we didnt yet have a Carson City bureau reported that it could be days before the ailing governor signed the bill. As to the economics of the legislation, a license fee of $50 per table and $12.50 per handle for slot machines would be charged, with counties taking 50 percent of the money and the city and state each taking 25 percent.
That information was upstaged by a story about a prison riot in Joliet, Illinois.
On March 19, UP reported that while waiting for Gov. Balzars signature, Reno announced plans for casinos that would outrival anything in the United States in splendor and gaming attractions. The story concluded with reports from around the state that casinos will lose no time in satisfying the supposed demand for wide-open games.
Heres the entirety of the March 20 report from the Associated Press announcing the start of legalized gambling: Governor Fred B. Balzar returned to his office for a short time (yesterday) and one of his first official acts was to sign the newly enacted gambling bill which becomes effective immediately.
Thats it.
That sentence got less play on that days front page than a story about two California teenagers who stole a Chevrolet coupe and drove it to Las Vegas, and even less than a brief about a car accident that cracked a stores plate-glass window and smashed the tool box on one of the vehicles running boards. The bills signing was only slightly bigger news than the fact that Miss Marjorie Goodwin of Las Vegas was one of 42 honor students at Long Beach Junior College and that she was planning to come home for a visit about April 4.
Finally, on March 21, we reported that gaming would be in full swing later that night at several Las Vegas resorts. The days banner headline, though, concerned the investigation into a fire that had been set in a local storefront, damaging its stock.
Each weekday, Starting Point, the Review-Journals recently revamped free morning newsletter, takes a look back at a front page from that day in history. To subscribe, visit reviewjournal.com/email-alerts.
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New York lawmakers still mulling over whether to expand gambling options – The Center Square
Posted: at 2:58 am
(The Center) Members of the New York State Legislature Budget Conference Committee met Wednesday for the first time to hash out the differences in their budget plans.
One such difference involves gambling, as the Senates budget plan involves issuing as many as three licenses for casino resorts in the downstate region. The Houses version does not. The Cuomo administration hasnt really spoken on the issue recently, but during his state of the state address in January, Gov. Andrew Cuomo mentioned seeking requests for information from gaming companies interested in operating a casino in or around New York City.
A recently released study from Spectrum Gaming Group estimates three casino resorts could generate $842 million in new tax revenues by 2025.
Speaking with The Center Square on Tuesday, state Sen. Joseph Addabbo, D-Queens, said hes not worried about the plans not seeing eye-to-eye right now.
That's where conversations and negotiations will start, said Addabbo, who chairs the Senate Committee on Racing, Gaming and Wagering. You know, you can imagine a very complex budget of the state. There are many differences on many issues. So, that's okay to be in that position.
Currently, state gaming law prevents the downstate licenses from being awarded until 2023. That was done to give the four upstate resorts an opportunity to mature. However, that was well before the COVID-19 pandemic cratered New York Citys and the states economy.
Addabbo isnt the only one who has talked about New York City casinos. New York Yankees President Randy Levine, who previously served as the citys deputy mayor for economic development, has supported casinos as an economic booster. Mayoral candidate Andrew Yang has called for building one on Governors Island.
Immediately these three licenses one, two or three would mean thousands of jobs, construction jobs, union jobs, long-term full-time jobs, Addabbo said. You know, that's what you look for when youre looking to come out of a pandemic. So, it's not only about revenue, it's about the job growth.
The downstate casino topic wont be the only gaming issue the parties will discuss. Both the Assembly and Senate budgets include mobile sports betting. Their plans look identical, with each casino, including tribal ones, having the chance to partner with two mobile operators. The fee for each mobile license is $12 million, with mobile revenues taxed at 12 percent.
Cuomo, who had long opposed expanding beyond offering sportsbooks at casinos, has warmed to the idea in recent months as the state has sought new revenue streams. However, his proposal has been for the state to control mobile sports betting in a fashion akin to the lottery.
The administration believes that model can generate hundreds of millions in revenue for the state. However, Addabbo said smaller states and the District of Columbia have tried that approach with less than stellar results.
The proposal from lawmakers is modeled after such states as New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Addabbo said its up to the lawmakers to impress upon the administration that that model is better for the state.
With legal options across the river as well as bookies and unregulated offshore books serving as competition, New York needs a mobile sports betting product that will keep those gamblers from utilizing the other options.
A poll released by the Siena College Research Institutethis week shows 51 percent of registered voters back expanding sports betting to allow for online apps. Only 30 percent oppose it, while 18 percent have no opinion.
The budget talks start with a cloud hanging over the Cuomo administration, thanks to scandals involving nursing home policy and alleged sexual harassment. Many lawmakers including Democrats have called on the governor to step down, as they question how effective he can be in managing budget negotiations and the pandemic while being investigated.
Addabbo, though, is not among them. He said the governor may very well be distracted, but he has staff, like Budget Director Rob Mujica, who have jobs and responsibilities tied to budget negotiations.
He also wants to see how the independent investigation overseen by Attorney General Letitia James plays out.
Allegations need to be turned into factually sworn in statements, and then we'll have a basis for our options, which include legislative options, impeachment options and calling for resignation, Addabbo said.
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New York lawmakers still mulling over whether to expand gambling options - The Center Square
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Three plead guilty to gambling operations in Georgia and South Carolina – The Augusta Chronicle
Posted: at 2:58 am
Three men pleaded guilty Thursday to a federal charge of taking part in illegal gambling operations, including two Burke County men who agreed to forfeit a total of more than $300,000.
Grady BrandonMobley and Daniel Cates of Burke County and Joel Rees Jones of Greenwood, S.C., entered their pleas in U.S. District Court in Augusta to violation of the prohibition of illegal gambling. Mobley also pleaded guilty to a second charge, false or fraud statements for filing a fraudulent income tax return for 2017.
As part of the plea agreement, Mobley turned over a check for $207,716 in forfeiture funds and a $2,000 fine. Cates agreed to pay a $100,000 forfeiture before his sentencing.
IRS and FBI agents uncovered the gambling operating. They foundevidence that Mobley operated as a bookie for at least 10 years in Burke County, taking bets and paying out winnings, Assistant U.S. Attorney Tara Lyons told Chief Judge J. Randal Hall.
Mobley eventually moved the business online to a sports betting website operated out of Costa Rica. In September 2015, Mobley joined with Jones who operated a small gambling business. The two men split proceeds, Lyons said.
The federal agents were able to trace most of the money, but they couldn't find any evidence in bank records against Jones, Lyons said. He later told agents that he always kept the gambling money in cash.
Mobley used his parents'legal check-cashingbusiness for a time, then moved to Cates' tire store to try to eliminate any trace of illegal funds, Lyons said. Between 2014 and 2017 there was $250,000that federal agents tracedthrough Cates' business, Lyons said.
All three men remain free on bonds set Thursday. Sentencing will take place after pre-sentencing reports are prepared by the federal probation office.
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Connecticut Gives the OK For Sports Wagering and Online Gambling – i95rock.com
Posted: at 2:58 am
Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont announced yesterday, March 18, that the state of Connecticut has reached an agreement with both the Mashantucket Pequot and Mohegan tribes that will basically legalize sports betting and online casino wagering games here in the state.
According to the press release, the state hopes that the agreement will bring in tens of millions of dollars in new revenue and it will also bring the Connecticut Lottery into the sports betting spotlight with two new CT lotto sports betting venues in Bridgeport and Hartford and up to 15 new sports betting locations around the state.
There are also a couple of key components that have been announced from the agreement, one being that both Mohegan and Foxwoods will no longer pursue the development of a long-planned additional casino that was going to be located in East Windsor, at least as long as this agreement between the tribes and the state last.
Also, you knew that there was going to be state taxes, it is Connecticut, the land of incredible tax, so for the first 5 years, there's going to be an 18% tax on new online commercial casino gaming. That will go up after the first 5 years to 20%. There will also be an announced 13.75 percent tax on sports wagering.
So, your $100 wager in the future online Mohegan Sun Casino will earn Connecticut $18 with the 18% tax. Your $100 sports wager will be taxed at 13.75%, so it will give the state $13.75 for every $100 you bet. I don't think that the street bookies have anything to worry about yet. It will be interesting to see how the CT Lottery sports betting venues in Bridgeport and Hartford are built out and the other 15 locations that will be built around the state. Interesting times.
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N.J. gambling revenue flat in February, even with Super Bowl – NJ.com
Posted: at 2:58 am
By WAYNE PARRY Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) Despite a highly anticipated Super Bowl, New Jerseys casinos and racetracks took in over $200 million less in sports bets in February than they did a month earlier, state gambling regulators said Tuesday.
Figures released by the state Division of Gaming Enforcement show the gambling outlets handled nearly $743 million worth of sports bets in February, down from the more than $996 million they handled in January.
But Februarys sports betting numbers were still about $200 million higher than they were in February 2020. That, combined with continued strong performance from internet gambling, which was up over 80% from a year ago, helped the casinos and tracks barely exceed the total amount they took in last February.
The $288.2 million they won this February was up 0.3% from a year ago.
Business done in person at casinos was down over 32% in February compared with a year ago, when casino closures had not yet happened.
The numbers were released on the anniversary of New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy shutting down the casinos due to the coronavirus pandemic. They remained closed until early July 2020, and still operate under capacity restrictions.
Casino win could not compare to the pre-pandemic results of last year, before restrictions on capacity, amenities, and entertainment were implemented, said James Plousis, chair of the state Casino Control Commission. Governor Murphys order that increases indoor casino occupancy to 50% later this week will help speed the casinos recovery. Atlantic City has been successful minimizing risk to visitors during the pandemic, and it is ready to move forward safely.
The casinos and tracks kept over $46 million of the sports bets they handled in February, up from just $17 million a year ago.
Among total revenue from individual casinos, Hard Rock was up 8.6% to $29.2 million; Ocean was up 2.4% to $21.8 million; and Borgata was up 1.8% to $67.6 million.
Harrahs was down over 43% to $15 million; Resorts was down almost 37% to $9.1 million; Caesars was down 35% to $13.5 million; and Tropicana was down almost 27% to $22 million.
Two other casinos recently changed their financial reporting due to a sale (Ballys) or the splitting off of an internet gambling arm (Golden Nugget).
A report released Tuesday by the Lloyd D. Levenson Institute for Gaming, Hospitality and Tourism at Stockton University quantified some of the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic on Atlantic Citys gambling industry.
It found that casino revenue from slots, table games, poker and in-person sports books declined by over 48% from last February through this one, but online gambling and sports betting revenue soared by nearly 92% over that same period as many customers were quarantining or avoiding casinos even after they reopened in the summer.
Before the pandemic, online betting accounted for roughly 20% of gaming revenues, but has since grown to nearly 47%.
The Stockton report also attempted to assess visitation levels to Atlantic City during the pandemic, finding that the number of cars entering the city on the Atlantic City Expressway declined by 33% from January 2020 through January 2021. During that same period, passenger counts at Atlantic City International Airport were down almost 60%.
And nearly 600,000 fewer people attended meetings and conventions in Atlantic City from March 2020 through February 2021 than in the prior 12-month period. This resulted in almost $260 million less in attendee spending, a 90% reduction year-over-year.
___
Follow Wayne Parry at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC
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N.J. gambling revenue flat in February, even with Super Bowl - NJ.com
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How To Invest In The Market Responsibly When Everyone Else Is Gambling – Yahoo Finance
Posted: at 2:58 am
The pandemic has ushered in a new generation of retail stock market speculators. FOMO traders and gamblers have flooded into the market in an effort to get rich quick, and coordinated buying efforts by Reddit's WallStreetBets community and other social media groups have sent the stock prices of some questionable stocks soaring in recent months.
Despite a global pandemic, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSE: SPY) is up nearly 80% from its March 2020 lows.
During cycles of stock market euphoria in which gamblers and speculators are seemingly grabbing all the headlines and attention, its easy for investors to lose sight of what responsible long-term investing looks like.
Tilsons Take: Former hedge fund manager Whitney Tilson recently outlined two simple things every investor should do during times like these to avoid making bad investments due to FOMO.
First, Tilson said investors should remember the market has been through periods of irrational exuberance many times before, and what's happening in 2020 is nothing new. Most recently, the mortgage market experienced this type of euphoria back in 2007. Before that, there were buying frenzies in tech stocks during the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s.
The second thing Tilson said investors need to remember is that investors shouldnt feel pressured to invest in anything they dont understand or dont believe in. He said Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) is a perfect example.
I'm not interested in investing in any cryptocurrency for the same reason I'm not interested in buying a Rembrandt: because I can't value it, he said.
Tilson also said he's not shorting cryptocurrencies because human emotion is extremely difficult to predict.
If the price of something isn't connected to any sort of reality (such as future cash flows), then it could literally trade anywhere, Tilson said.
See Also: Beginning Investor? Here's How To Protect Your Portfolio In 2021
Dividends, Value And Commodities: Michael Wilkerson, executive vice chairman of Helios Fairfax Partners, recently wrote a story for Barrons in which he discussed what investors can do to protect themselves during the current speculative bubble.
Story continues
Like Tilson, Wilkerson said investors first goal should be to resist the FOMO temptation.
If one has to stay invested, avoid the temptation of high-flying tech and growth equities, which are the most overvalued, in favor of diversifying among recently abandoned dividend-paying value stocks and emerging markets, Wilkerson said.
He also said inflation-sensitive commodity producers, such as companies that produce food metals and energy, should also perform relatively well.
Wilkerson also agrees that bitcoin is particularly risky at this point.
Cryptocurrencies have no intrinsic value, and, like fiat currencies, are worth whatever the market happens to believe. When the euphoria wears off, they may be hit hard, he said.
Benzingas Take: Just because you recognize that a stock market is in bubble territory doesnt mean you cant make a lot of money owning stocks as the bubble inflates further. The critical part of trading during a bubble is maintaining discipline, not getting caught up in the FOMO and cashing out somewhere near the top.
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2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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A towering genome: Experimentally validated adaptations to high blood pressure and extreme stature in the giraffe – Science Advances
Posted: at 2:57 am
INTRODUCTION
Giraffes are immediately recognizable due to their exceptionally long necks and legs, making them the tallest terrestrial animals. Giraffes played a central role in different evolutionary schools of thought, including those of Lamarck and Darwin. Their unusual anatomy is thought to provide various selective advantages. In addition to allowing access to otherwise inaccessible food resources (1), their elevated head position provides an excellent vantage point for scanning the horizon and thus detecting predators or competitors, both of which are crucial for their survival (2). However, their exceptional anatomy is also accompanied by considerable physiological challenges. Most notably, the cardiovascular system has to tolerate twofold higher systemic blood pressure than most other mammals to supply the brain with blood (3). This elevated hydrostatic pressure has resulted in hypertrophy of their cardiac and arteriole walls (3) and adaptations of the circulation system that prevent sudden changes in blood pressure when a giraffe elevates or lowers its head (4). Giraffes also have neuromotor delays due to their long neural networks (5) and face difficulties in rising due to their long legs, which increases the danger associated with resting and drinking. They also require greatly enlarged and strengthened nuchal ligaments to support their long, heavy neck (6). Hence, the giraffe provides a unique case for studying co-adaptation or evolution in several different traits that are causally linked to an extreme body plan.
The okapi (Okapia johnstoni) is the only other extant member of the Giraffidae family and provides a useful point of genomic comparison. A study published in 2016 provided the first giraffe and okapi draft genomes and identified candidate genes and pathways involved in neck elongation and cardiovascular adaptations (7). However, these initial draft genomes were relatively fragmented, which can both introduce certain biases and limit the interpretation of some analyses (8). Furthermore, the comparative analyses carried out using these draft genomes were restricted to 17,210 genes, which were annotated by aligning with cattle (Bos taurus) reference transcripts, thus limiting the resolution power to explore genomic features unique to the giraffe, not least given the paucity of other ruminant genomes available at that time. Hence, the availability of a higher-quality giraffe genome assembly together with our recently published whole-genome dataset for ~50 ruminant species (9) opens up the possibility of identifying giraffe-specific mutations with a much higher accuracy and robustness. This, in turn, provides a better resource for inferring the true genomic changes that account for the unique body plan of the giraffe.
Here, we report an improved, chromosome-level genome assembly of a Rothschilds giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis rothschildi), the results of comparative analysis against the recently available ruminant genomes, andcruciallyfunctional validation of one key cardiovascular and skeletal gene in gene-edited mice. These results provide insights into the genetic basis of the giraffe anatomy and associated adaptations, with particular implications concerning the cardiovascular system, which may be helpful for treating human cardiovascular disease and hypertension.
We sequenced the genome of a male Rothschilds giraffe with a combination of single-molecule real-time sequencing (using an Oxford Nanopore platform), paired-end sequencing (with an Illumina HiSeq 2000 system), and Hi-C sequencing (figs. S1 and S2 and table S1). First, we used Nanopore data to generate initial contigs, and after polishing with Illumina reads, we obtained an assembly with contig N50 of 35.9 Mb (table S2). Next, Hi-C data were used to anchor the contigs into chromosomes, which yielded a final assembly of 2.44 Gb with ~97.95% of the bases successfully anchored to 15 chromosomes (2n = 30) (figs. S3 and S4 and table S3). A series of evaluations show that the genome assembly is of high quality (see the Supplementary Materials, figs. S2 to S6, and tables S4 to S11).
Chromosome evolution is related to genome size, gene family evolution, and speciation (10). The giraffe has many fewer chromosomes (2n = 30) than the putative ancestral karyotype of even-toed ungulates (2n = 58 to 60), suggesting the occurrence of multiple chromosome fusion events in its evolution (11). Using the genomes of cattle, goat, giraffe, and okapi, with sperm whale as outgroup, we reconstructed the ancestral karyotype of the Giraffidae and Bovidae families (2n = 60) (table S12), which corresponds to the ancestor of the Pecora suborder (11). The results indicate that just three fissions and three fusions occurred in the cattle lineage since the pecoran ancestor. Hence, most of the ancestral chromosome structure is retained in cattle, including the complement of 30 chromosomes. In contrast, a minimum of four fissions and 17 fusions occurred between the pecoran ancestor and the giraffe, resulting in a substantial decrease (to 15) in haploid chromosome number (Fig. 1). The functional significanceif anyof such prolific chromosome fusions in giraffes requires further research.
(A) The figure displays the distribution of ancestral chromosome segments in cattle and giraffe genomes, including interchromosome rearrangements and fission and fusion events in cattle and giraffe. Blue asterisks in the cattle chromosome diagram indicate chromosome fission events in cattle. Blue asterisks in the giraffe chromosome diagram indicate sites of chromosome rearrangements. (B) Circos plot showing syntenic relationships of chromosomes between giraffe (left) and cattle (right). Chromosomes are colored on the basis of the cattle homologies. (C) Two types of collinear relationship between giraffe and cattle. The top and bottom horizontal lines represent giraffe and cattle chromosomes, respectively, and the lines between them link the alignment blocks.
We next evaluated the adaptive divergence between giraffe and other mammals in coding regions, using both the branch and the branch-site models implemented in PAML (12). We detected 101 positively selected genes (PSGs) and 359 rapidly evolving genes (REGs) in the giraffe (P < 0.05 according to 2 tests in both cases) (fig. S7 and tables S13 and S14) (13). This is a large increase compared to those found in the previous giraffe genome study, which identified 17 PSGs and 53 genes with adaptive divergence (high divergence compared with other mammals or unique substitutions) in giraffe (7). Notably, while 7 of the 17 PSGs from the previous study overlapped with our findings, the remaining 10 PSGs showed no positive selection signal in our analyses, which is primarily caused by the inclusion of many more ruminant branches as background. We show two examples of how the inclusion of a larger background panel or better genome quality refined our ability to identify giraffe-specific selection signals (fig. S8). Similarly, only 15 of the 53 previously identified adaptive divergence genes (7) were identified as PSGs or REGs in our analysis. Together, the improved genome assembly (better genome completeness, accuracy, and annotation) and higher number of accessible ruminant reference genomes allow us to substantially decrease both false positive and false negative signals of genes undergoing adaptive evolution in the giraffe. A Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis showed that the 460 PSGs and REGs identified in the present study are primarily related to growth and development, nervous and visual systems, circadian rhythm, and blood pressure regulation (table S15). The KEGG (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes) pathwaybased analysis suggested that the rapidly evolving pathways in giraffe compared to okapi are related to metabolic, circulatory, and immune systems (table S16).
The giraffe fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptorlike protein 1 (FGFRL1) gene has previously been identified as one of the most conspicuous targets of selection in the giraffe (7). FGFRL1 contains a cluster of seven nonsynonymous mutations in its key FGF binding domain when compared against sequences in other ruminants and outgroup mammals (fig. S9). Using our substantially expanded set of background genomes, we confirmed that these mutations are unique to the giraffe and that FGFRL1 contains more unique substitutions than any other giraffe gene (table S17). Mutations in FGFRL1 cause severe cardiovascular and skeletal defects in humans and mice (14, 15), and hence we follow Agaba et al. (7) in hypothesizing that FGFRL1 may be associated with the extreme cardiovascular and skeletal adaptations in the giraffe. To investigate the in vivo consequences of these substitutions, we introduced these seven mutations into the FGFRL1 gene of mice to obtain giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice, using CRISPR-Cas9 technology (fig. S10). In contrast to mice with targeted complete deletion of the gene (14), which die with multiple congenital malformations, giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice were viable and fertile.
The cardiovascular hemodynamic in the giraffe is characterized by exceptionally high blood pressure without related organ damage, in contrast to the typical detrimental effects of hypertension observed in other animals/humans (3). FGFRL1 is known to be involved in the cardiovascular system (14), and we hypothesized that some vascular adaptations in the giraffe may only be apparent in a hypertensive physiological setting. To test this, we induced high blood pressure in wild-type (WT) and mutant FGFRL1 mice. The mice were infused with angiotensin II (Ang II; 900 ng/kg per minute; fig. S11), which induces hypertension by vasoconstriction and sodium retention. Our giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice showed no signs of congenital heart defects (fig. S12) or any obvious alterations in heart rate compared to WT controls (fig. S13). Although the basal blood pressure was slightly higher in giraffe-type than in WT FGFRL1 mice, no significant difference was observed (fig. S13). After Ang II infusion for 28 days, the average systolic and diastolic blood pressure in WT controls were significantly increased to 158.97 5.01 and 94.54 8.60 mmHg (Fig. 2A), respectively, confirming that hypertension was successfully induced in them. Unexpectedly, the Ang IIinduced hypertension was absent in giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice, which showed average systolic and diastolic pressures of 125.30 5.97 and 83.43 11.77 mmHg, respectively, after Ang II infusion for 28 days (Fig. 2A), not significantly different from giraffe-type FGFRL1 controls. Moreover, significantly less myocardial and renal fibrosis was observed in giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice, as manifested by significantly lower proportion of collagen fibers in their heart and kidney than in WT controls, which obviously resulted from the absence of Ang IIinduced hypertension in giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice (Fig. 2B and fig. S14). In addition, the impaired heart function caused by hypertension in Ang IItreated WT mice was also significantly alleviated in giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice, as evidenced by improved left ventricular ejection fractions (LVEFs) and fractional shortening (LVFS) (fig. S15). Our findings collectively suggest that the giraffe-type FGFRL1 has little effect on cardiac development but can prevent Ang IIinduced hypertension and thus avoid or at least alleviate a range of detrimental effects of hypertension. In addition, our molecular dynamics (MD) simulations suggested that the unique variants in giraffe-type FGFRL1 could affect its binding affinity with FGF ligands (fig. S16), potentially interfering with their cross-talk with renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system to modulate blood pressure and providing a possible mechanism by which giraffe-type FGFRL1 modulates blood pressure (16). Despite the differences in cardiovascular structure and physiology between mice and human and the possibility that other genes may have contributed to the observed systemic co-adaptation to hypertension, it is intriguing to speculate that FGFRL1 might hold promise as a therapeutic target for prevention or treatment of hypertension or cardiovascular diseases in humans. Nevertheless, we acknowledge that this perspective is tentative and awaits a thorough investigation of the mechanisms behind the observed cardiovascular effect of giraffe-type FGFRL1.
(A) Giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice showed significantly lower systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressures (mmHg) than WT FGFRL1 mice after Ang II infusion for 28 days. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, one-way ANOVA followed by Tukeys post hoc test. (B) Giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice had significantly lower proportions of fibrotic areas in heart than WT FGFRL1 mice after 28 days of Ang II infusion. ***P < 0.001, one-way ANOVA followed by Tukeys post hoc test. Error bars indicate SD. (C) Whole-mount skeletons of P0 mice showed hypoplasia of skeletal elements in giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice. **P < 0.01 by t test. (D) Adult giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice show no discernible body size and skeletal phenotype difference to WT mice. (E) Giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice showed significantly higher BMD, BV/TV, and average trabeculae thickness than WT mice. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 by t test. Photo credit: Jianbo Gao, The Fourth Military Medical University.
In addition to the observed cardiovascular effect, we noticed that postnatal day 0 (P0) giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice showed prenatal hypoplasia of skeletal elements, with a smaller body size, delayed craniofacial development, shortened axial/appendicular skeletons, and smaller vertebral lengths than the P0 WT mice (Fig. 2C and fig. S17). In contrast, adult giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice (24 to 26 g, 16 weeks) showed no discernible skeletal phenotype compared with WT mice or any significant deviation in body size and weight, limb length, or vertebral height (Fig. 2D and fig. S18). This suggests that mutations in this gene in itself are not sufficient for neck elongation in the giraffe, refuting a previous hypothesis (7), although again we must recognize the limitations of introducing a gene into a different genetic background. However, it also shows that giraffe-type FGFRL1-associated postnatal bone growth can compensate for the observed prenatal effects such that FGFRL1 may play an indirect role in the exceptional bone growth of giraffe, e.g., by accelerating bone formation to maintain bone mineral density (BMD), as in humans (17). Therefore, we next examined bone ultrastructure by micro computed tomography (microCT). Giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice achieved significantly higher BMD, bone volume/total volume (BV/TV) ratio, and average trabeculae thickness in vertebrae (C3) and distal femur (Fig. 2E and fig. S19). Skeletal growth rate tends to be inversely related to bone strength in animals (18), but despite having the highest skeletal growth rate among mammals, giraffes maintain normal BMD (19). In summary, we find indications for a pleiotropic adaptive effect of the highly unique giraffe-type FGFRL1 by not only significantly enhancing hypertension resistance but also achieving normal bone strength, despite the accelerated rate of bone growth in the giraffe.
Previous anatomical and physiological analyses suggest that multiple giraffe organs are involved in associated adaptations of the cardiovascular system, including hypertrophy of the left ventricle and interventricular walls (3), thickening of blood vessels of the lower extremities, and low glomerular filtration rates (20). Our results revealed that several pathways involving tissues influenced by high blood pressure, such as blood vessels, heart, and kidney, were significantly diverged between giraffe and other ruminants (table S16). The platelet activation pathway plays an important role in hypertension-associated thrombosis (Fig. 3A) (21). Three REGs (COL1A2, LYN, and PLCB1) and a number of genes with giraffe-specific amino acid variations are involved in the two major platelet activation, shape change, and platelet aggregation paths. A further set of PSGs and REGs that participate in phosphatidylinositol metabolism (PIP4K2A, ISYNA1, MTMR3, CDS1, and INPP1) may also be involved in the regulation of platelet activation (22). Another giraffe-divergent pathway is the adrenergic signaling pathway in cardiomyocytes, which is related to cardiac contraction and possibly the morphological remodeling of the giraffe heart (Fig. 3B) (23). Highly divergent genes in this pathway are mainly involved in ion transport (SCN7A, SLC9A1, ATP1A4, and CACNA2D4), which is important for myocardial function (24). We also found strong signals of adaptation in two major adrenergic receptors (ADRA1A and ADRA2B), as previously reported (7). Although ADRA2B is mainly expressed in the nervous system, both of these receptors are strongly related to blood pressure regulation (25, 26). Last, we detected strong giraffe-specific divergence in genes related to the proximal tubule bicarbonate reclamation and endocrine and other factor-regulated calcium reabsorption pathways. Changes in these pathways may reduce the pressure gradient across membranes in the giraffe kidney and protect it from hypertensive damage (Fig. 3C) (20). The REG AQP1 encodes a water-transporting protein in cell membranes of kidney proximal tubules and is involved in kidney development and injury responses (27). Two REGs (PLCB1 and ATP1A4) that are reportedly involved in hypertension or related organ damage participate in more than one of the mentioned pathways (28, 29), in accordance with expectations of co-adaptation of the blood vesselheartkidney axis in giraffe. In addition to genes in the mentioned pathways, we also detected other PSGs and REGs that may help to avoid hypertensive damage, including ANGPTL1, which is associated with the integrity of vascular endothelium (30), and TGFB1, which is strongly implicated in multiorgan fibrosis associated with hypertension (31). The finding of multiple genes involved in several phenotypic traits that share evolutionary constraints due to the extreme stature of the giraffe suggests that pleiotropy may play an important role in evolving such an extreme body plan.
(A) Modifications of genes in the platelet activation pathway may help to prevent damage to giraffe blood vessels. (B) Genes in the adrenergic signaling in cardiomyocytes that show high divergence in giraffe. (C) The proximal tubule bicarbonate reclamation (top) and endocrine and other factor-regulated calcium reabsorption (bottom) pathways may help to prevent kidney damage.
For herbivorous ungulates subject to predation, vigilance is crucial for survival and has two components: gathering information and instigating muscular action after signal transduction through the nervous system (32). Giraffes are thought to have a distinctive retinal cone topography that provides the best visual acuity in the Artiodactyla, which, together with the elevated head, enhances the capacity for horizon scanning (33). Accordingly, we found not only a number of PSGs and REGs that contribute to eye development and vision but also a number of genes that are related to Usher syndrome in humans (CDH23, PCDH15, USH2A, NINL, and UBR3), which affects vision, hearing, and balance (34), suggesting a related suite of sensory co-adaptations in giraffe (Fig. 4A). Similar to all other ruminants, we found only two opsin genes; thus, we could not verify that giraffes see color, at least not trichromatic color as has been hypothesized before (35). We found indications that the sense of smell in the giraffe may be degenerated. Compared to okapi, giraffe has lost at least 53 olfactory-related genes, including 50 encoding olfactory receptors, two encoding vomeronasal receptors, and one encoding an odorant binding protein (table S18). Further analysis shows that most of these olfactory receptors are spatially clustered and were lost because of a segmental deletion (Fig. 4B and figs. S20 and S21). Moreover, the contracted gene families in giraffe were also enriched in olfactory receptor activity (fig. S22 and tables S19 and S20). This may be an evolutionary consequence of enhanced vision, consistent with the hypothesized trade-off in sensory acuity found in many taxa (36) and/or with reduction in competition for food with other browsers.
(A) PSGs and REGs associated with giraffes visual, auditory, and balance systems. (B) Giraffes have lost several olfactory receptors (for example, on chromosome 10 of goat) compared to okapi. The location of genes on goat chromosome is shown in the rectangle, and the collinear relationship of giraffe-goat and okapi-goat is shown in the top and bottom panels, respectively. (C) Genetic changes involved in light-mediated regulation of the molecular clock in giraffe suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) neurons.
Moreover, the extreme morphology of the giraffe increases its vulnerability when asleep by increasing the time required to become upright. Expectedly, therefore, given their needs for vigilance and high food intakes, giraffe sleep durations are among the lowest recorded (37). Concordantly, we found evidence of rapid evolution of PER1 in giraffe, a period family gene critical for the maintenance of circadian rhythm (38) and the emergence of a stop codon in the first exon of PER2 (Fig. 4C and fig. S23), possibly altering the transcript of this important circadian rhythm gene. HCRT, which plays a role in the regulation of sleep and arousal (39), also shows accelerated evolution in giraffe. Together, there is evidence that adaptive modifications of circadian rhythm and sleep arousal systems in giraffe have promoted short and fragmented sleep patterns. Overall, the comparative genomic analysis highlights that the unique stature of the giraffe has led to a series of necessary behavioral co-adaptations.
Procedures applied in sample collection and animal experiments were reviewed and approved by the Institutional Ethics Committee of the Northwestern Polytechnical University and Fourth Military Medical University. Fresh blood samples of a male Rothschilds giraffe used for genome sequencing were acquired during a routine physical examination at the Guangzhou Zoo in China. High-quality genomic DNA was extracted using a Qiagen DNA purification kit, then used to construct libraries, and sequenced with Illumina HiSeq and Oxford Nanopore GridIOn platforms. Data (199.64 and 140.56 Gb) were obtained, after filtering, from these platforms. In addition, lymphocytes collected from the same blood sample were used for Hi-C library construction, and 138.71-Gb data were obtained using the Illumina HiSeq X Ten platform.
Contigs were assembled by Wtdbg software (v1.2.8) (41), and the assembled contig-level genomes were polished by Racon (v1.2.1) (42) and Pilon (v1.22) (43). Last, the contigs were anchored into chromosomes by Hi-C sequencing reads through the Juicer (version 1.5) (44) and 3D-DNA (version 180922) (45) software workflow. To further improve the chromosome-scale assembly, it was subjected to manual review and refinement using Juicebox Assembly Tools (https://github.com/theaidenlab/juicebox). Last, genome quality was estimated with BUSCO (version 3.0.2) (46), whole-genome synteny with cattle (UMD3.1) genome, and k-mer analysis and by mapping back the initial reads to the assembly.
According to the good genome synteny with cattle genome (Fig. 1B), we assigned the chromosome numbers of our assembly as indicated by previous research (11). Our assembly agrees with the giraffe karyotype revealed before: 13 biarmed autosomal pairs and an acrocentric autosomal pair plus the sex chromosomes (47). Then, we mapped both the Nanopore reads and Illumina reads used for the assembly back onto it. More than 98% of the Nanopore raw reads could be mapped to the assembly properly with an average depth of 54, and 99.99% of genome has a reads depth more than 50, with chromosome X excluded (fig. S5 and table S4). Furthermore, 97.14% of the Illumina reads could be mapped to the genome properly with an average depth of 79 (fig. S5 and table S5). Last, the assembly also recovered 96.15% of the expected single-copy orthologous genes according to BUSCO analysis (table S6), the highest coverage yet for the reported Giraffidae genomes (table S7).
Tandem repeats were predicted by Tandem Repeats Finder software (v4.04) (48). RepeatMasker (open-4.0.7) (49), RepeatModeler (v1.0.8) (49), and RepeatProteinMask (v1.0.8) were used together to predict transposable elements. Gene structures were determined by combining ab initio and homology methods. For ab initio annotation, we used Augustus (v3.2.1) (50) and GENSCAN (v1.0) (51) to analyze the repeat-masked genome. For homolog-based annotation, protein sequences of cattle (B. taurus; ensemble 87 release), sheep (Ovis aries; ensemble 87 release), and human (Homo sapiens; ensemble 87 release) genomes were aligned to giraffe sequences using BLAST software (v2.3.0) (52) and GeneWise (v2.4.1) (53). Then, results from the three methods were integrated by EVidenceModeler software (v1.1.1) (54). To annotate the gene functions, the integrated gene set was aligned against public databases, including KEGG, Swiss-Prot, TrEMBL, COG, and NR with BLAST (v2.3.0) (52), and merged with annotations by InterProScan (v4.8) (55) software. The integrity of annotation was estimated by comparison with reference genome annotations and BUSCO (version 3.0.2) (46). On the basis of homology and ab initio gene prediction, we annotated 21,580 protein-coding genes in the genome (fig. S6 and tables S8 to S11), with 96.81% completeness according to BUSCO analysis, suggesting that our annotation also has high quality (table S6).
The complete mitochondrial cytochrome b (Cytb) gene (1140 base pairs) was used to investigate the phylogenetic status of our sample. In addition, previously published cytb sequences of 160 giraffes and outgroup (okapi and pronghorn) were retrieved from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) according to the accession number provided by a research before (56). These sequences were aligned with our data using ClustalW in MEGA7 (57) with default parameters and subsequently adjusted manually to maximize positional homology. Last, the remaining sequences were used to infer the phylogenetic tree using IQ-TREE (58) under parameters -nt AUTO -m MFP -bb 1000 -bnni -o Pronghorn. As a result, the specimen used for genome sequencing was clustered together with the giraffe subspecies Rothschilds giraffe (G. camelopardalis rothschildi) with high support (ultra fast bootstrap value = 93).
We reconstructed the ancestral chromosome karyotype of Giraffidae and Bovidae families using the genomes of cattle, goat, giraffe, okapi, and sperm whale (as outgroup). With giraffe as the reference genome, we carried out pairwise alignments with other species as target using LASTZ (v1.1) with parameters T=2 C=2 H=2000 Y=3400 L=6000 K=2200 --format=axt. Then, axtChain, chainMergeSort, chainPreNet, and ChainNet were used to generate chain and net files as input for DESCHRAMBLER (59). Last, we identified 1502 conserved segments by DESCHRAMBLER at a 300-kb resolution and reconstructed 30 predicted ancestral chromosomes (2n = 60) with a total length of ~2.25 Gb.
To minimize effects of annotation, pseudogenes, and genome quality, we used conserved genome synteny methodology to establish a high-confidence orthologous gene set that included four nonruminants (human, dog, horse, and pig) and six ruminants (pronghorn, giraffe, okapi, forest musk deer, reindeer, and cattle). Using the goat genome sequence (ARS1) as a reference, we performed synteny alignment for these ten species with Last (version 894) (60) and generated pairwise whole-genome alignments with Multiz (version 11.2) (61) using the default parameters. A total of 13,776 genes were extracted from the synteny alignments. We used the Codeml program in the PAML package (version 4.8) (12) to estimate the lineage-specific evolutionary rate for each branch with the phylogenetic extracted from a ruminant study before (9). First, the branch-site model was used for detecting PSGs. The giraffe lineage was specified as the foreground branch, and a likelihood ratio test (LRT) was conducted to examine whether the branch-site model containing positively selected codons (omega > 1) fits better than the null model, which only includes neutral selection or negative selection (omega 1). The P values for model comparison were computed based on chi-square statistics. Besides, the potential positive selection of codon sites was assessed by their posterior probabilities calculated with the Bayes empirical Bayes (BEB) method. The genes with an LRT P < 0.05 and with the sites with a posterior probability of positive selection over 0.95 from the BEB method were treated as PSGs. Then, the branch model that was used for detecting REGs used the same orthologous genes as above. We tested whether the foreground branch (the giraffe lineage) exhibited a significantly higher omega (regardless of whether it is greater than 1) than the background branch (the other lineages) using the LRT test. The genes with an LRT P < 0.05 were treated as REGs in giraffe. The combined set of PSGs and REGs was subjected to KEGG and GO enrichment analysis (P < 0.05) with the online tool Metascape (v1.0) (62).
We used 12 species to construct gene families, including human, horse, dog, pig, killer whale, camel, pronghorn, giraffe, okapi, white-lipped deer, forest musk deer, and cattle. Proteins with premature stop codons, nontriplet codon lengths, and fewer than 30 amino acids were removed. Last, we used OrthoMCL (v2.0.9) (63) for protein clustering with a dataset of 256,596 protein sequences. Family expansion or contraction analysis was performed by CAFE (v3.1) (64), and the phylogenetic tree was extracted from the ruminant study before (9). Gene expansion and contraction results for each branch of the phylogenetic tree were estimated, and enrichment analysis about the gene families expanded or contracted in giraffe was performed with KOBAS (v3.0) (65).
For each KEGG pathway with more than 20 genes, we counted numbers of nonsynonymous and synonymous mutations between giraffe and its most recent common ancestor (Nh and Sh, respectively). We also counted numbers of nonsynonymous mutations and synonymous mutations between okapi and the MCRA (Nt and St, respectively). We formulated a null hypothesis that the probabilities of nonsynonymous mutations compare to synonymous mutations in giraffe and okapi are similar and then applied a one-sided binomial test to identify rapidly evolving pathways with significantly more nonsynonymous mutations than expected. The binomial test included three parameters for each KEGG pathway: the number of successes (Nh), the number of trials (Nh + Sh), and the hypothetical probability of success is given by Nt*All_NhAll_NtNt*All_NhAll_Nt+St*All_ShAll_St, where All is the genome-wide value. Last, the rapidly KEGG pathways were identified using a threshold of P < 0.05 (one-sided binomial test).
Through analysis of conserved genome synteny with goat, we obtained a highly confident set of orthologous genes of mammals (including mouse, human, cat, cheetah, dog, rhinoceros, horse, camel, pig, dolphin, killer whale, and sperm whale) and 51 ruminant species. Domain regions of the encoded proteins were predicted with Pfam (67). Then, we scanned the domain regions in the syntenic alignments and identified the giraffe-specific amino acid substitutions compared to all other species. The substitutions that were not fixed in all published giraffe genomes were further filtered. Last, we identified 414 giraffe genes that have unique substitutions in domain regions, of which 33 genes have more than three unique substitutions (table S17).
The Illumina short reads of giraffe and okapi were mapped onto the cattle genome (UMD3.1). For every gene, the read depth was counted with SAMtools (68) along the coding sequence (CDS). For the CDS region, if more than 50% of the sites had not been mapped with reads in the giraffe, but if more than 50% sites had been mapped with more than 10 reads in okapi, the gene was assumed to be specifically lost in giraffe. It turned out that giraffe uniquely lost 83 genes compared to okapi. To avoid sequencing problem in one research and validate the result, we repeated the same analysis with previously published genomic short reads of another giraffe (9), and it showed that giraffe uniquely lost 78 genes with 63 genes overlapping the result before. However, okapi lost only 13 genes uniquely under the same analysis. We noticed that 53 of the 63 genes lost in giraffe were related to the sense of smell and that they located spatially clustered on chromosomes 10 and 15 on cattle genome (table S18). Furthermore, to validate the result on genome level and to avoid the influence of using cattle genome, we checked the synteny alignment between giraffe-goat (ARS1) and okapi-goat (ARS1), and it verified again that giraffe lost more olfactory-receptor genes on chromosomes 10 and 15 of goat (Fig. 4B and fig. S20). We further checked the deletions on giraffes chromosome 7 (chromosome 10 of goat) with the long Nanopore reads mapped back to the giraffe genome and goat genome; the deletion region can be finely span in giraffe (fig. S21).
Because the 3D structure of the complexes of FGFR1 (a major FGF receptor and was thought to be involved in FGFRL1 signaling) and FGF23 (the ligand) has been revealed (69), we built an in silico 3D structure model of the giraffe FGFRL1 (from IG-II to IG-III domain) by homolog modeling and docked the model with FGF23 to assess possible effects of the mutations on the proteins interaction. The 3D structure model of mtFGFRL1 (seven sites in giraffe type) and WT FGFRL1 (seven sites changed to common type) was separately generated with homolog modeling methods by PROMALS3D (70) with several FGFR structures as templates [Protein Data Bank (PDB) nos. 1E0O, 1EV2, 1II4, 1IIL, 1NUN, 1RY7, 2FDB, 3GRW, 3OJ2, 3OJV, 4J23, and 5W59]. The FGF23 structure was obtained from PDB no. 5w21. The structure of FGFRL1 and FGF23 complexes was produced by the Rosetta (71) protein docking program, using the docking conformation of FGFR1 and FGF23 in PDB no. 5w21 as the initial docking pose.
MD simulations were performed by using the Amber (version 18) software (72) in combination with the ff14SB (version 1.0) force field (73). Protein systems were solvated in the TIP3P water model with an edge distance of 12 , and systems were neutralized (pH 7) by adding suitable counterions (Na+ or Cl). Before performing MD simulations, each system was minimized by means of the steepest descent and conjugate gradient methods through 2000 steps. NPT (constant number of atoms, pressure, and temperature) simulations were then carried out to heat the system from 0 to 300 K using Langevin dynamics for temperature control and the SHAKE algorithm on hydrogen atom constraint. MD simulations were run for 100 ns with the time step set to 2 fs. Last, determination of the relative binding free energy was performed using the molecular mechanics generalized Born surface area method in the Amber package (version 18) (72).
To elucidate the giraffe-type FGFRL1 genes role in skeletogenesis and the cardiovascular system, the seven unique substitutions in giraffe-type FGFRL1 were introduced into the FGFRL1 gene in mice (giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice) by CRISPR-Cas9mediated genome editing as follows. First, single-guide RNA (sgRNA) expression constructs were prepared, based on the pUC57-sgRNA expression vector (no. 51132; Addgene), using oligonucleotide sequences listed in table S21. Next, the sgRNA expression plasmids were linearized and prepared as templates for in vitro transcription using a MEGAshortscript kit (Ambion, AM1354). The sgRNA was purified using a MEGAclear kit (Ambion, AM1908). Fertilized eggs were injected with a mixture of Cas9 protein, sgRNAs, and homologous DNA template. Genomic DNA was then extracted from the tails of 7-day-old mice (new pups) using phenol-chloroform and recovered by alcohol precipitation to detect the mutations. Polymerase chain reaction primers for targeting sites are listed in table S22. Last, mice with expected mutations were mated with WT mice to get enough heterozygous mutant mice, and then homozygous mutant mice were produced by crossing and prepared for consequence experiments.
Neonates (P0) were subjected to whole-mount skeletal staining. Briefly, both P0 WT FGFRL1 (n = 5) and giraffe-type FGFRL1 (n = 5) mice were fixed in 90% ethanol for 12 hours at 4C. Next, specimens were transferred into acetone for 12 hours at room temperature and then into a cartilage staining solution containing 0.03% Alcian blue (w/v; Sigma-Aldrich, USA), 80% ethanol, and 20% acetic acid overnight. The samples were washed with 20% acetic acid, and the ossified tissues were stained in a solution with 0.005% Alizarin red (w/v) overnight at 4C. The specimens were transferred into 1% KOH (w/v) until the muscle tissue was transparent and then saved with 50% glycerol solution containing 1% KOH (w/v). Whole skeleton images were then obtained with an M205 FA stereoscopic microscope (Leica, Germany), and ImageJ software (version 1.46; National Institutes of Health, USA) was used to obtain the following measurements: head length (distance from the frontal tip of the maxilla to the caudal tip of the occipital bone in lateral view), spine length (distance from the annular vertebrae to the tail root), and length of limbs (distance between the two tips of limbs). The measurements were repeated three times for each sample, and average values were obtained.
Adult (16 weeks, 24 to 26 g) WT FGFRL1 mice (n = 8) and giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice (n = 8) were randomly selected and anesthetized by intraperitoneal 1% (w/v) sodium pentobarbital solution (40 mg/kg). The body weight and length (from nose to tail root) of each mouse was measured. Then, x-ray images of the head, lumbar vertebra, and limbs of both sets of mice (n = 3) were acquired using a SkyScan 1276 high-resolution in vivo x-ray microtomography (Bruker, Germany). Digital images were obtained under identical imaging conditions using the same acquisition parameters, and ImageJ software was used to obtain the following measurements: head length (as defined above), height of the L1 lumbar vertebra (distance between the upper and lower endplates of the vertebral body), and length of limbs (as defined above). The measurements were repeated three times for each sample, and average values were obtained.
After x-ray imaging, the adult WT FGFRL1 mice (n = 10) and giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice (n = 10) were sacrificed by an intraperitoneal pentobarbital (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) overdose. The skeleton of each mouse was harvested and fixed by 4.0% formalin. The formalin-fixed femurs and cervical vertebrae were scanned, reconstructed, and analyzed using a GE-LSP industrial microCT system (GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL, USA) with the following parameters: 80 kV, 80 A, and 3.0-s exposure time per projection. The BMD, average trabeculae thickness, and BV/TV of the distal femur (n = 6) and C3 vertebra (n = 10) were measured. In addition, the maximum transverse diameter, average thickness of cortical bone, and both inner and outer perimeters of their femurs (at mid-diaphysis) were measured.
Hypertension was induced using Ang II (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) delivered using Alzet-1004 osmotic mini-pumps (Cupertino, CA). Briefly, WT FGFRL1 and giraffe-type FGFRL1 mice (16 weeks old, 24 to 26 g) were anesthetized with isoflurane (1% at 1.5 liters/min oxygen). A 1-cm incision was then made on the back, and an osmotic mini-pump containing Ang II (n = 10) or an equivalent volume of vehicle (saline, n = 10) was embedded. Ang II (900 ng/kg per minute) was infused at a rate of 10 l/hour for 28 days. At the end of the infusion, the systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressures were measured using a tail-cuff sphygmomanometer. In addition, cardiac function was evaluated by echocardiography, and hypertension-related cardiac remodeling was examined histologically.
Blood pressure was measured using a BP2010A intelligent noninvasive sphygmomanometer for mice (Softron, Japan), which was calibrated and validated before recording. The reliability of tail-cuff determination of mouse blood pressure was independently validated by radiotelemetry before making critical assessment in mice. Before measurement, mice were acclimated to a restraint box and tail-cuff inflation in a quiet area with designated temperature (22 2C) for 5 days. On the day of testing, mice typically remained relatively calm and still in the restrainer after acclimation period. The tail-cuff was positioned at the base of the tail and a heating pad, supplied as an accessory for the tail-cuff sphygmomanometer, and was preheated to 35C. Blood pressure recordings were acquired after the mice had prewarmed for 10 min. Briefly, the cuff was inflated to 250 mmHg and deflated over 20 s. Ten inflation and deflation cycles were included for each recording. The first three cycles were regarded as acclimation cycles and not included in the analysis. The highest and lowest values in the remaining seven cycles were discarded, and the remaining five readings were averaged for a single session value in further analysis. Changes in tail volume were detected by the pressurized receptor when the blood returned to the tail during cuff deflation. Measurements of the mice were obtained for 3 consecutive days before the Ang II or control treatment to obtain their baseline blood pressure.
Transthoracic echocardiography was performed to evaluate cardiac function using a Vevo 2100 instrument (VisualSonics, Canada) equipped with a 18- to 38-MHz MS-400 imaging sensor. Briefly, the mice were anesthetized with 1% isoflurane via an anesthetic gas machine and maintained in a supine position with limbs fixed, and body temperature was kept stable through a heat pad, while respiration and heart beats were continuously monitored. M-mode images were analyzed to obtain estimates of LVEF, LVFS, left ventricular posterior wall thickness at end diastole, and left ventricular internal diameter at end diastole. For this analysis, a dedicated software (Vevo 2100 version 1.4, VisualSonics, Canada) was used.
At the end of Ang II infusion, the heart (n = 6) and kidney (n = 8) of each vehicle- and Ang IItreated mouse were harvested and fixed with 4.0% formalin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). Histological sections, 5 m thick, were prepared following standard fixation, clearing, dehydration, waxing, and paraffin-embedding procedures. Representative histological slides were used for histological staining, as follows.
Hematoxylin and eosin staining. The heart and kidney sections were processed by routine dewaxing in xylene followed by hydration with an ethanol concentration gradient. Thereafter, nuclei and cytoplasm in the sections were stained by hematoxylin and eosin (G1004; Servicebio, China), respectively. The sections were then dehydrated, cleared, and mounted. Staining was observed, and images were captured using a BX53+R6 light microscope (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan).
Masson trichrome staining. Heart and kidney tissues were subjected to Masson trichrome staining using a kit and protocols provided by the manufacturer (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). Heart and kidney fibrosis were then measured in terms of the proportion of collagen using ImageJ software. Three randomly selected regions of identical size in each heart or kidney slice were examined, and the average values obtained from them were recorded.
Sirius red staining. The heart sections were stained by incubation in a 0.1% (w/v) solution of Sirius red (G1018; Servicebio, China) in saturated aqueous picric acid for 1 hour. The slides were then washed, dehydrated, and mounted. This treatment stains collagen and noncollagen components red and orange, respectively. Heart fibrosis was measured in terms of the proportion of red-colored collagen using ImageJ software. Three randomly selected regions of identical size in each heart slice were examined, and the average values obtained from them were recorded.
Measurements of continuous variables were expressed as means SD. All statistical analysis was performed with SPSS software (version 19.0; Chicago, USA). Independent Students t tests were used to compare baseline values of WT FGFRL1 and giraffe FGFRL1 mice groups. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare mean values. If there was a significant overall difference among groups, then Tukeys post hoc test was used for multiple comparisons between groups. A value of P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Acknowledgments: We thank D. Wu for providing the giraffe sample. Funding: This study is supported by the Talents Team Construction Fund of Northwestern Polytechnical University (NWPU) to Q.Q. and W.W., the National Program for Support of Top-notch Young Professionals to Q.Q., the Research Funds for Interdisciplinary Subject, NWPU (19SH030408) to Q.Q., the 1000 Talent Project of Shaanxi Province to Q.Q. and W.W., the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81972052, 81672148, and 81802143) to J.H., and the Independent Research Fund Denmark (8049-00098B) to R.H. Author contributions: Q.Q., J.H., W.W., and R.H. designed this project and research aspects. Zhipeng Li, H.S., G.L., and Q.L. performed sample collection, and D.C. performed sequencing library construction. C.L., L.C., Yuan Yuan, Y.Z., T.Q., M.H., B.Z., Chenglong Zhu, C.Z., and K.W. performed data analysis including genome assembly, annotation, gene family, gene loss, and chromosome evolution. J.G., L.M., and X.C. conducted the experiments for mice. Zihe Li and Y.X. built 3D modeling of proteins. L.Z., Zeshan Lin, Yuan Yin, and W.X. contributed to figure designing. C.L., Q.Q., and J.H. wrote the manuscript. W.W., R.H., and M.T.P.G. performed manuscript amending. Competing interests: J.H., Q.Q., J.G., C.L., and W.W. are inventors on a patent application related to this work filed by the Fourth Military Medical University and the Northwestern Polytechnical University (no. 2020110969712, filed on 14 October 2020). The authors declare no other competing interests. Data and materials availability: All sequencing data and assembled genome have been deposited on the NCBI database with accession ID PRJNA627604. All other data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.
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A towering genome: Experimentally validated adaptations to high blood pressure and extreme stature in the giraffe - Science Advances
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