| Literature DB >> 26542574 |
Senjie Lin1, Shifeng Cheng2, Bo Song3, Xiao Zhong3, Xin Lin4, Wujiao Li3, Ling Li4, Yaqun Zhang4, Huan Zhang5, Zhiliang Ji6, Meichun Cai6, Yunyun Zhuang5, Xinguo Shi4, Lingxiao Lin4, Lu Wang4, Zhaobao Wang3, Xin Liu3, Sheng Yu3, Peng Zeng3, Han Hao7, Quan Zou6, Chengxuan Chen3, Yanjun Li3, Ying Wang3, Chunyan Xu3, Shanshan Meng4, Xun Xu3, Jun Wang8, Huanming Yang9, David A Campbell10, Nancy R Sturm10, Steve Dagenais-Bellefeuille11, David Morse11.
Abstract
Dinoflagellates are important components of marine ecosystems and essential coral symbionts, yet little is known about their genomes. We report here on the analysis of a high-quality assembly from the 1180-megabase genome of Symbiodinium kawagutii. We annotated protein-coding genes and identified Symbiodinium-specific gene families. No whole-genome duplication was observed, but instead we found active (retro)transposition and gene family expansion, especially in processes important for successful symbiosis with corals. We also documented genes potentially governing sexual reproduction and cyst formation, novel promoter elements, and a microRNA system potentially regulating gene expression in both symbiont and coral. We found biochemical complementarity between genomes of S. kawagutii and the anthozoan Acropora, indicative of host-symbiont coevolution, providing a resource for studying the molecular basis and evolution of coral symbiosis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26542574 DOI: 10.1126/science.aad0408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728