English

Addressing missing context in regulatory variation across primate evolution

Genomics 2025-04-04 v1 Populations and Evolution

Abstract

In primates, loci associated with adaptive trait variation often fall in non-coding regions. Understanding the mechanisms linking these regulatory variants to fitness-relevant phenotypes remains challenging, but can be addressed using functional genomic data. However, such data are rarely generated at scale in non-human primates. When they are, only select tissues, cell types, developmental stages, and cellular environments are typically considered, despite appreciation that adaptive variants often exhibit context-dependent effects. In this review, we 1) discuss why context-dependent regulatory loci might be especially evolutionarily relevant in primates, 2) explore challenges and emerging solutions for mapping such context-dependent variation, and 3) discuss the scientific questions these data could address. We argue that filling this gap will provide critical insights into evolutionary processes, human disease, and regulatory adaptation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2504.02081,
  title  = {Addressing missing context in regulatory variation across primate evolution},
  author = {Genevieve Housman and Audrey Arner and Amy Longtin and Christian Gagnon and Arun Durvasula and Amanda Lea},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.02081},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

20 pages, 2 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T22:44:27.755Z