| Literature DB >> 23537068 |
H Bradley Shaffer, Patrick Minx, Daniel E Warren, Andrew M Shedlock, Robert C Thomson, Nicole Valenzuela, John Abramyan, Chris T Amemiya, Daleen Badenhorst, Kyle K Biggar, Glen M Borchert, Christopher W Botka, Rachel M Bowden, Edward L Braun, Anne M Bronikowski, Benoit G Bruneau, Leslie T Buck, Blanche Capel, Todd A Castoe, Mike Czerwinski, Kim D Delehaunty, Scott V Edwards, Catrina C Fronick, Matthew K Fujita, Lucinda Fulton, Tina A Graves, Richard E Green, Wilfried Haerty, Ramkumar Hariharan, Omar Hernandez, LaDeana W Hillier, Alisha K Holloway, Daniel Janes, Fredric J Janzen, Cyriac Kandoth, Lesheng Kong, A P Jason de Koning, Yang Li, Robert Literman, Suzanne E McGaugh, Lindsey Mork, Michelle O'Laughlin, Ryan T Paitz, David D Pollock, Chris P Ponting, Srihari Radhakrishnan, Brian J Raney, Joy M Richman, John St John, Tonia Schwartz, Arun Sethuraman, Phillip Q Spinks, Kenneth B Storey, Nay Thane, Tomas Vinar, Laura M Zimmerman, Wesley C Warren, Elaine R Mardis, Richard K Wilson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We describe the genome of the western painted turtle, Chrysemys picta bellii, one of the most widespread, abundant, and well-studied turtles. We place the genome into a comparative evolutionary context, and focus on genomic features associated with tooth loss, immune function, longevity, sex differentiation and determination, and the species' physiological capacities to withstand extreme anoxia and tissue freezing.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23537068 PMCID: PMC4054807 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2013-14-3-r28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1Standard deviation of GC content at different spatial scales. Genomes were partitioned into non-overlapping windows (5-, 20-, 80-, and 320-kb). As window size increases, variation in GC content naturally decreases. The western painted turtle exhibits a pattern consistent with high variation in nucleotide composition at smaller scales, rather than sustained isochoric variation at larger scales seen in mammals and birds. The expected pattern of decreasing standard variation assumes a compositionally homogeneous genome with a mean GC proportion of 0.41.
Figure 2A revised phylogeny of major amniote lineages and their rates of molecular evolution. (a) Bayesian phylogram depicting the relationships of the eight primary amniote lineages, and their rates of molecular evolution. The phylogeny demonstrates the sister group relationship of turtle and archosaurs (allligator plus birds). The numbers at nodes denote posterior probabilities (all are at the maximum of 1.0). (b) The histogram shows the relative rate of substitution inferred for each lineage under a relaxed clock. For analysis details, see Materials and Methods, Phylogeny and substitution rate).
Figure 3Western painted turtle miR-29b and response to freezing. (a) Nucleotide sequence and predicted secondary structure of pre-miR-29b transcripts from H. sapiens, A. spinifera, and C. p. bellii at 25 C. Nucleotide substitution which leads to differential terminal stem-loop formation that is unique to C. p. bellii is circled. (b) Relative expression levels of miR-29b as assessed by quantitative RT-PCR in liver samples of hatchling western painted turtles under control (5°C acclimated), 24 h frozen (at -2.5°C), or 4 h thawed (at 5°C) conditions. Data are means ± s.e.m. (n = 5 different animals). Parallel analysis of 5S rRNA found no significant changes between control and experimental conditions for this reference RNA. * Significantly different from the corresponding control (P <0.05).
Figure 4Conserved syntenic regions containing tooth-specific genes across toothed (human, anole) and edentulous (turtle, chicken) vertebrates. AMBN and ENAM are in a reptile-specific chromosomal region, precluding the use of human as a reference sequence for these genes. Dashed outlines indicate pseudogenization.
Figure 5Maximum likelihood estimates of the phylogenetic relationships among taxa for five genes involved in gonadogenesis. Branch lengths are proportional to the number of substitutions per site; numbers at nodes are bootstrap proportions based on 500 pseudoreplicates. Colored branches denote the taxonomic group for each taxon. Tip font colors denote sex-determining mechanisms (red = TSD, gray = GSD). For all species, the full coding region was utilized except where only partial sequences were available, in which case the tip is denoted as (P).
Figure 6Gene families showing expansion in the western painted turtle lineage. The number of genes within a family is provided in front of each bar. Gene families associated with the immune response are shown in red.