| Literature DB >> 23451296 |
Caroline B Albertin1, Laure Bonnaud, C Titus Brown, Wendy J Crookes-Goodson, Rute R da Fonseca, Carlo Di Cristo, Brian P Dilkes, Eric Edsinger-Gonzales, Robert M Freeman, Roger T Hanlon, Kristen M Koenig, Annie R Lindgren, Mark Q Martindale, Patrick Minx, Leonid L Moroz, Marie-Therese Nödl, Spencer V Nyholm, Atsushi Ogura, Judit R Pungor, Joshua J C Rosenthal, Erich M Schwarz, Shuichi Shigeno, Jan M Strugnell, Tim Wollesen, Guojie Zhang, Clifton W Ragsdale.
Abstract
The Cephalopod Sequencing Consortium (CephSeq Consortium) was established at a NESCent Catalysis Group Meeting, "Paths to Cephalopod Genomics- Strategies, Choices, Organization," held in Durham, North Carolina, USA on May 24-27, 2012. Twenty-eight participants representing nine countries (Austria, Australia, China, Denmark, France, Italy, Japan, Spain and the USA) met to address the pressing need for genome sequencing of cephalopod mollusks. This group, drawn from cephalopod biologists, neuroscientists, developmental and evolutionary biologists, materials scientists, bioinformaticians and researchers active in sequencing, assembling and annotating genomes, agreed on a set of cephalopod species of particular importance for initial sequencing and developed strategies and an organization (CephSeq Consortium) to promote this sequencing. The conclusions and recommendations of this meeting are described in this white paper.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23451296 PMCID: PMC3570802 DOI: 10.4056/sigs.3136559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stand Genomic Sci ISSN: 1944-3277
Cephalopod species proposed for initial sequencing efforts.
| Species | Estimated genome size | Current sequencing coverage | Geographic distribution | Lifestyle juvenile/adult | Research importance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.5-5 Gb | 46× | world-wide | planktonic/ benthic | classic model for brain and behavior, fisheries science | |
| 3.2 Gb | 50× | California, Mexico | benthic | emerging model for development and behavior, fisheries science | |
| 4.5 Gb | 10× | Indo-Pacific | benthic | toxicity | |
| 4.5 Gb | - | East Atlantic- Mediterranean | nectobenthic | classic model for behavior and development, fisheries science | |
| 2.7 Gb | - | Northwest Atlantic | nectonic | cellular neurobiology, fisheries science | |
| 3.7 Gb | - | Hawaii | nectobenthic | animal-bacterial symbiosis, model for development | |
| 2.1 Gb | 80× | Japan | nectobenthic | model for development, small genome size | |
| - | 50× | Australia | nectobenthic | model for development, small genome size | |
| 4.5 Gb | 60× | world-wide | nectonic | largest body size | |
| 2.8-4.2 Gb | 10× | Indo-Pacific | nectonic | “living fossil”, outgroup to coleoid cephalopods |