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Quantifying and comparing the amount of adaptive evolution among different species is key to understanding how evolution works. Previous studies have shown differences in adaptive evolution across species; however, their specific causes remain elusive. Here, we use improved modeling of weakly deleterious mutations and the demographic history of the outgroup species and ancestral population and estimate that at least 20% of nonsynonymous substitutions between humans and an outgroup species were fixed by positive selection. This estimate is much higher than previous estimates, which did not correct for the sizes of the outgroup species and ancestral population. Next, we jointly estimate the proportion and selection coefficient (p+ and s+, respectively) of newly arising beneficial nonsynonymous mutations in humans, mice, and Drosophila melanogaster by examining patterns of polymorphism and divergence. We develop a novel composite likelihood framework to test whether these parameters differ across species. Overall, we reject a model with the same p+ and s+ of beneficial mutations across species and estimate that humans have a higher p+s+ compared with that of D. melanogaster and mice. We show that this result cannot be caused by biased gene conversion or hypermutable CpG sites. We discuss possible biological explanations that could generate the observed differences in the amount of adaptive evolution across species.Eukaryotic gene transcription is regulated by a large cohort of chromatin-associated proteins, and inferring their differential binding sites between cellular contexts requires a rigorous comparison of the corresponding ChIP-seq data. We present MAnorm2, a new computational tool for quantitatively comparing groups of ChIP-seq samples. MAnorm2 uses a hierarchical strategy for normalization of ChIP-seq data and assesses within-group variability of ChIP-seq signals based on an empirical Bayes framework. In this framework, MAnorm2 allows for abundant differential ChIP-seq signals between groups of samples as well as very different global within-group variability between groups. Using a number of real ChIP-seq data sets, we observed that MAnorm2 clearly outperformed existing tools for differential ChIP-seq analysis, especially when the groups of samples being compared had distinct global within-group variability.Studies of Y Chromosome evolution have focused primarily on gene decay, a consequence of suppression of crossing-over with the X Chromosome. Here, we provide evidence that suppression of X-Y crossing-over unleashed a second dynamic selfish X-Y arms races that reshaped the sex chromosomes in mammals as different as cattle, mice, and men. PCO371 Using super-resolution sequencing, we explore the Y Chromosome of Bos taurus (bull) and find it to be dominated by massive, lineage-specific amplification of testis-expressed gene families, making it the most gene-dense Y Chromosome sequenced to date. As in mice, an X-linked homolog of a bull Y-amplified gene has become testis-specific and amplified. This evolutionary convergence implies that lineage-specific X-Y coevolution through gene amplification, and the selfish forces underlying this phenomenon, were dominatingly powerful among diverse mammalian lineages. Together with Y gene decay, X-Y arms races molded mammalian sex chromosomes and influenced the course of mammalian evolution.The regulatory functions of 10 individual viral microRNAs (miRNAs) that are abundantly expressed from the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) latency-associated transcript (LAT) region remain largely unknown. Here, we focus on HSV-1 miRNA miR-H8, which is within the LAT 3p exon, antisense to the first intron of ICP0, and has previously been shown to target a host glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchoring pathway. However, the functions of this miRNA have not been assessed in the context of the viral genome during infection. Therefore, we constructed a recombinant virus lacking miR-H8 (17dmiR-H8) and compared it to the parental wild-type and rescue viruses to characterize phenotypic differences. In rabbit skin cells, 17dmiR-H8 exhibited only subtle reductions in viral yields. In contrast, we found significant decreases in both viral yields (8-fold) and DNA replication (9.9-fold) in murine neuroblastoma cells, while 17dmiR-H8 exhibited a 3.6-fold increase in DNA replication in differentiated human neuronal cells pt region is known to regulate many aspects of HSV-1 latency and reactivation, although the mechanisms for these functions remain unknown. To this end, we characterize an HSV-1 recombinant containing a deletion of a LAT-encoded miRNA, miR-H8, and demonstrate that it plays no detectable role in the establishment of latency or reactivation in differentiated human neurons (LUHMES cells) and mouse and rabbit models. Therefore, this study allows us to exclude miR-H8 from phenotypes previously attributed to the LAT region. Elucidating the genetic elements of HSV-1 responsible for establishment, maintenance, and reactivation from latency may lead to novel strategies for combating persistent herpesvirus infections.Mites are notorious for being vectors transmitting infectious pathogens and source of allergens causing allergic conditions in animals and humans. However, despite their huge impact on public health, the virome of mites remains unknown. Here we characterized the virus diversity and abundance of 14 species of medically important mites based on total RNA sequencing data sets generated in this study as well as those deposited in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) database. A total of 47 genetically distinct viruses were identified and classified into 17 virus families or virus super-groups, and the viral sequences accounted for as much as 29.67% of total non-rRNA transcriptome in one mite library. The most commonly identified viruses are members of Picornavirales, among which we revealed more than one type of viruses that are evolutionarily related to dicistronic viruses but contain a single open reading frame, thus likely representing a recent example of host (i.e., mite)-related parallel evolution from dicistronic to monocistronic genomic form within the family Dicistroviridae To our best knowledge, this is the first time to perform comprehensive and systematic screening of RNA virome in medically important mites including house dust mites (HDM).

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