| Literature DB >> 22527267 |
Yuki Minegishi1, Christiaan V Henkel, Ron P Dirks, Guido E E J M van den Thillart.
Abstract
Freshwater eels (genus Anguilla), especially the species inhabiting the temperate areas such as the European, American and Japanese eels, are important aquaculture species. Although artificial reproduction has been attempted since the 1930s and large numbers of studies have been conducted, it has not yet fully succeeded. Problems in eel artificial breeding are highly diverse, for instance, lack of basic information about reproduction in nature, no appropriate food for larvae, high mortality, and high individual variation in adults in response to maturation induction. Over the last decade, genomic data have been obtained for a variety of aquatic organisms. Recent technological advances in sequencing and computation now enable the accumulation of genomic information even for non-model species. The draft genome of the European eel Anguilla anguilla has been recently determined using Illumina technology and transcriptomic data based on next generation sequencing have been emerging. Extensive genomic information will facilitate many aspects of the artificial reproduction of eels. Here, we review the progress in genome-wide studies of eels, including additional analysis of the European eel genome data, and discuss future directions and implications of genomic data for aquaculture.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22527267 PMCID: PMC3419832 DOI: 10.1007/s10126-012-9444-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Biotechnol (NY) ISSN: 1436-2228 Impact factor: 3.619
Fig. 1Gene ontology category distribution in each of the three main GO domains (biological process [BP], molecular function [MF] and cellular component [CC]) of the European eel. 10,242 out of a total of 186,116 GO terms that were significantly provisionally annotated by Henkel et al. (2012) were first assigned to the three ancestral categories (BP, MF, CC), and subsequent analysis was performed in each category. The percentage indicated just below the three domain names presents the proportions of terms assigned to a category relative to the total GO terms. Top 20 fractions are shown in percentage in the graph for each category