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1.
Genes (Basel) ; 14(6)2023 05 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37372376

ABSTRACT

The basal South American notothenioid Eleginops maclovinus (Patagonia blennie or róbalo) occupies a uniquely important phylogenetic position in Notothenioidei as the singular closest sister species to the Antarctic cryonotothenioid fishes. Its genome and the traits encoded therein would be the nearest representatives of the temperate ancestor from which the Antarctic clade arose, providing an ancestral reference for deducing polar derived changes. In this study, we generated a gene- and chromosome-complete assembly of the E. maclovinus genome using long read sequencing and HiC scaffolding. We compared its genome architecture with the more basally divergent Cottoperca gobio and the derived genomes of nine cryonotothenioids representing all five Antarctic families. We also reconstructed a notothenioid phylogeny using 2918 proteins of single-copy orthologous genes from these genomes that reaffirmed E. maclovinus' phylogenetic position. We additionally curated E. maclovinus' repertoire of circadian rhythm genes, ascertained their functionality by transcriptome sequencing, and compared its pattern of gene retention with C. gobio and the derived cryonotothenioids. Through reconstructing circadian gene trees, we also assessed the potential role of the retained genes in cryonotothenioids by referencing to the functions of the human orthologs. Our results found E. maclovinus to share greater conservation with the Antarctic clade, solidifying its evolutionary status as the direct sister and best suited ancestral proxy of cryonotothenioids. The high-quality genome of E. maclovinus will facilitate inquiries into cold derived traits in temperate to polar evolution, and conversely on the paths of readaptation to non-freezing habitats in various secondarily temperate cryonotothenioids through comparative genomic analyses.


Subject(s)
Perciformes , Humans , Animals , Phylogeny , Antarctic Regions , Perciformes/genetics , Fishes/genetics , Chromosomes
2.
G3 (Bethesda) ; 12(11)2022 11 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35904764

ABSTRACT

For any genome-based research, a robust genome assembly is required. De novo assembly strategies have evolved with changes in DNA sequencing technologies and have been through at least 3 phases: (1) short-read only, (2) short- and long-read hybrid, and (3) long-read only assemblies. Each of the phases has its own error model. We hypothesized that hidden short-read scaffolding errors and erroneous long-read contigs degrade the quality of short- and long-read hybrid assemblies. We assembled the genome of Trematomus borchgrevinki from data generated during each of the 3 phases and assessed the quality problems we encountered. We developed strategies such as k-mer-assembled region replacement, parameter optimization, and long-read sampling to address the error models. We demonstrated that a k-mer-based strategy improved short-read assemblies as measured by Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Ortholog while mate-pair libraries introduced hidden scaffolding errors and perturbed Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Ortholog scores. Furthermore, we found that although hybrid assemblies can generate higher contiguity they tend to suffer from lower quality. In addition, we found long-read-only assemblies can be optimized for contiguity by subsampling length-restricted raw reads. Our results indicate that long-read contig assembly is the current best choice and that assemblies from phase I and phase II were of lower quality.


Subject(s)
Nanopores , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Genome , Base Sequence
3.
Gigascience ; 8(4)2019 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30715292

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Southern Ocean is the coldest ocean on Earth but a hot spot of evolution. The bottom-dwelling Eocene ancestor of Antarctic notothenioid fishes survived polar marine glaciation and underwent adaptive radiation, forming >120 species that fill all water column niches today. Genome-wide changes enabling physiological adaptations and the rapid expansion of the Antarctic notothenioids remain poorly understood. RESULTS: We sequenced and compared 2 notothenioid genomes-the cold-adapted and neutrally buoyant Antarctic toothfish Dissostichus mawsoni and the basal Patagonian robalo Eleginops maclovinus, representing the temperate ancestor. We detected >200 protein gene families that had expanded and thousands of genes that had evolved faster in the toothfish, with diverse cold-relevant functions including stress response, lipid metabolism, protein homeostasis, and freeze resistance. Besides antifreeze glycoprotein, an eggshell protein had functionally diversified to aid in cellular freezing resistance. Genomic and transcriptomic comparisons revealed proliferation of selcys-transfer RNA genes and broad transcriptional upregulation across anti-oxidative selenoproteins, signifying their prominent role in mitigating oxidative stress in the oxygen-rich Southern Ocean. We found expansion of transposable elements, temporally correlated to Antarctic notothenioid diversification. Additionally, the toothfish exhibited remarkable shifts in genetic programs towards enhanced fat cell differentiation and lipid storage, and promotion of chondrogenesis while inhibiting osteogenesis in bone development, collectively contributing to the achievement of neutral buoyancy and pelagicism. CONCLUSIONS: Our study revealed a comprehensive landscape of evolutionary changes essential for Antarctic notothenioid cold adaptation and ecological expansion. The 2 genomes are valuable resources for further exploration of mechanisms underlying the spectacular notothenioid radiation in the coldest marine environment.


Subject(s)
Fishes/genetics , Genome , Genomics , Adaptation, Physiological , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Biological Evolution , Computational Biology/methods , Data Curation , Environment , Fishes/classification , Freezing , Gene Expression Profiling , Genomics/methods , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Osteogenesis , Phylogeny , Transcriptome , Vertebrates , Whole Genome Sequencing
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(40): 14583-8, 2014 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25246548

ABSTRACT

Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) of polar marine teleost fishes are widely recognized as an evolutionary innovation of vast adaptive value in that, by adsorbing to and inhibiting the growth of internalized environmental ice crystals, they prevent death by inoculative freezing. Paradoxically, systemic accumulation of AFP-stabilized ice could also be lethal. Whether or how fishes eliminate internal ice is unknown. To investigate if ice inside high-latitude Antarctic notothenioid fishes could melt seasonally, we measured its melting point and obtained a decadal temperature record from a shallow benthic fish habitat in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. We found that AFP-stabilized ice resists melting at temperatures above the expected equilibrium freezing/melting point (eqFMP), both in vitro and in vivo. Superheated ice was directly observed in notothenioid serum samples and in solutions of purified AFPs, and ice was found to persist inside live fishes at temperatures more than 1 °C above their eqFMP for at least 24 h, and at a lower temperature for at least several days. Field experiments confirmed that superheated ice occurs naturally inside wild fishes. Over the long-term record (1999-2012), seawater temperature surpassed the fish eqFMP in most summers, but never exceeded the highest temperature at which ice persisted inside experimental fishes. Thus, because of the effects of AFP-induced melting inhibition, summer warming may not reliably eliminate internal ice. Our results expose a potentially antagonistic pleiotropic effect of AFPs: beneficial freezing avoidance is accompanied by melting inhibition that may contribute to lifelong accumulation of detrimental internal ice crystals.


Subject(s)
Antifreeze Proteins/metabolism , Ecosystem , Fish Proteins/metabolism , Fishes/metabolism , Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Crystallization , Fishes/physiology , Freezing , Ice , Physiological Phenomena , Seasons , Temperature
5.
Mol Biol Evol ; 25(6): 1099-112, 2008 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18310660

ABSTRACT

Hepcidin is a small bioactive peptide with dual roles as an antimicrobial peptide and as the principal hormonal regulator of iron homeostasis in human and mouse. Hepcidin homologs of very similar structures are found in lower vertebrates, all comprise approximately 20-25 amino acids with 8 highly conserved cysteines forming 4 intramolecular disulfide bonds, giving hepcidin a hairpin structure. Hepcidins are particularly diverse in teleost fishes, which may be related to the diversity of aquatic environments with varying degree of pathogen challenge, oxygenation, and iron concentration, factors known to alter hepcidin expression in mammals. We characterized the diversity of hepcidin genes of the Antarctic notothenioid fishes that are endemic to the world's coldest and most oxygen-rich marine water. Notothenioid fishes have at least 4 hepcidin variants, in 2 distinctive structural types. Type I hepcidins comprise 3 distinct variants that are homologs of the widespread 8-cysteine hepcidins. Type II is a novel 4-cysteine variant and therefore only 2 possible disulfide bonds, highly expressed in hematopoietic tissues. Analyses of d(N)/d(S) substitution rate ratios and likelihood ratio test under site-specific models detected significant signal of positive Darwinian selection on the mature hepcidin-coding sequence, suggesting adaptive evolution of notothenioid hepcidins. Genomic polymerase chain reaction and Southern hybridization showed that the novel type II hepcidin occurs exclusively in lineages of the Antarctic notothenioid radiation but not in the basal non-Antarctic taxa, and lineage-specific positive selection was detected on the branch leading to the type II hepcidin clade under branch-site models, suggesting adaptive evolution of the reduced cysteine variant in response to the polar environment. We also isolated a structurally distinct 4-cysteine (4cys) hepcidin from an Antarctic eelpout that is unrelated to the notothenioids but inhabits the same freezing water. Neighbor-Joining (NJ) analyses of teleost hepcidins showed that the eelpout 4cys variant arose independently from the notothenioid version, which lends support to adaptive evolution of reduced cysteine hepcidin variants on cold selection. The NJ tree also showed taxonomic-specific expansions of hepcidin variants, indicating that duplication and diversification of hepcidin genes play important roles in evolutionary response to diverse ecological conditions.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Biological/genetics , Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Fish Proteins/genetics , Perciformes/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides/chemistry , Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides/classification , Blotting, Northern , Cysteine/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Fish Proteins/chemistry , Fish Proteins/classification , Freezing , Gene Expression , Hepcidins , Molecular Sequence Data , Perciformes/genetics , Phylogeny , RNA/analysis , RNA/metabolism
6.
J Exp Biol ; 208(Pt 12): 2363-76, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15939776

ABSTRACT

The Notothenioid suborder of teleosts comprises a number of species that live below the sea ice of the Antarctic. The presence of 'antifreeze' glycoproteins in these fish as an adaptation to freezing temperature has been well documented but little is known about the adaptations of the visual system of these fish to a light environment in which both the quantity and spectral composition of downwelling sunlight has been reduced by passage through ice and snow. In this study, we show that the red/long-wave sensitive (LWS) opsin gene is not present in these fish but a UV-sensitive short-wave sensitive (SWS1) pigment is expressed along with blue-sensitive (SWS2) and green/middle-wave sensitive (Rh2) pigments. The identity and spectral location of maximal absorbance of the SWS1 and Rh2 pigments was confirmed by in vitro expression of the recombinant opsins followed by regeneration with 11-cis retinal. Only the SWS2 pigment showed interspecific variations in peak absorbance. Expression of the Rh2 opsin is localised to double cone receptors in both the central and peripheral retina, whereas SWS2 opsin expression is present only in the peripheral retina. SWS1 cones could not be identified by either microspectrophotometry or in situ hybridisation, presumably reflecting their low number and/or uneven distribution across the retina. A study of photoreceptor organisation in the retina of two species, the shallower dwelling Trematomus hansoni and the deeper dwelling Dissostichus mawsoni, identified a square mosaic in the former, and a row mosaic in the latter species; the row mosaic in Dissostichus mawsoni with less tightly packed cone photoreceptors allows for a higher rod photoreceptor density.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Biological , Darkness , Perciformes/physiology , Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate/metabolism , Phylogeny , Retinal Pigments/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Base Sequence , Blotting, Northern , Blotting, Southern , Cluster Analysis , DNA Primers , In Situ Hybridization , Microspectrophotometry , Molecular Sequence Data , Oceans and Seas , Retinal Pigments/genetics , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity
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