| Literature DB >> 33167983 |
Peter D Olson1, Alan Tracey2, Andrew Baillie3, Katherine James3,4, Stephen R Doyle2, Sarah K Buddenborg2, Faye H Rodgers2, Nancy Holroyd2, Matt Berriman5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chromosome-level assemblies are indispensable for accurate gene prediction, synteny assessment, and understanding higher-order genome architecture. Reference and draft genomes of key helminth species have been published, but little is yet known about the biology of their chromosomes. Here, we present the complete genome of the tapeworm Hymenolepis microstoma, providing a reference quality, end-to-end assembly that represents the first fully assembled genome of a spiralian/lophotrochozoan, revealing new insights into chromosome evolution.Entities:
Keywords: Centromeres; Chromosome assembly; Flatworms; Hymenolepis; Telomere loss
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33167983 PMCID: PMC7653826 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-020-00899-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Idiogram of Hymenolepis microstoma chromosomes. a Each chromosome is depicted by three horizontal tracks showing the positions of coding regions, repeats, and synteny relative to Echinococcus multilocularis (shown in b). Synteny is based on 100 kb windows, coloured according to the E. multilocularis chromosome with the greatest total number of residues matching using Promer (see the ‘Methods’ section). Where no hits were found, we coloured the window grey. Above the tracks, a graph shows the depth of coverage of Illumina reads mapped against the assembly. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) shown as red vertical lines along the sequence coverage graph. Red horizontal bars show two interruptions in synteny on Chr1 that reveal a mis-assembly in the E. multilocularis reference genome (see text). Positions of telomeric and centromeric repeat arrays that the chromosome ends are indicated. Regions identified as having enriched pfam clusters are numbered. Regions underscored with horizontal bars and labelled A, B, and rRNA depict large repeat arrays discussed in the text. b H. microstoma assembly scaffolds aligned against those of E. multilocularis
Assembly metrics among Hymenolepis microstoma genome releases
| v1 | v2 | v3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public release | 2013 | 2015 | 2018 |
| Size (Mb) | 141 | 182 | 169 |
| Ungapped size (Mb) | 138 | 161 | 163 |
| Scaffolds (including mitochondrion) | 1132 | 3643 | 7 |
| 2,484,793 | 21,388,553 | 6,486,653 | |
| Gaps | 3343 | 3767 | 85 |
| Scaffold N50 (Mb) | 0.539 | 7.673 | 25.8 |
| N90 (Mb) | 0.082 | 0.040 | 17.5 |
| Contigs | 4475 | 7410 | 92 |
| Contig N50 (Mb) | 0.075 | 0.063 | 5.81 |
| N90 (Mb) | 0.016 | 0.010 | 1.21 |
| GC content | 36% | 36% | 36% |
| Gene models | 10,241 | 12,368 | 10,139 |
| Transcripts including splice variants | 10,283 | 12,373 | 11,429 |
| Avg. gene length (bp) | 1478 | 1398 | 1930 |
| Exons/introns | 65,209/54,968 | 74,137/61,693 | 90,693/79,262 |
| Avg. exons per transcript | 6.3 | 6.0 | 7.9 |
| Avg. intron length (bp) | 863 | 851 | 866 |
| Avg. exon length (bp) | 214 | 233 | 217 |
| RNA-seq reads mapped to transcriptome | 99,295,156 | 104,204,808 | 109,485,265 |
| Transcripts with < 10 RNA-seq reads mapping | 1116 | 1513 | 563 |
| Transcripts with no RNA-seq read mapping | 568 | 707 | 193 |
| 1:1 orthologues with | 5710 | 5967 | 6299 (62%) |
| 1:1 orthologues with | 4403 | 4539 | 4801 (47%) |
Fig. 2Distribution of transposable elements. a Transposable elements classified by RepeatModeller (v1.0.11). b Additional unclassified elements
Fig. 3Chromosomal synteny among parasitic flatworms. Comparison between the tapeworms Hymenolepis microstoma and Echinococcus multilocularis. a A high level of synteny not only of scaffold occupancy among the chromosomes, but also of their arrangement within chromosomes, as indicated by their positions arrayed along the diagonal. Comparison between tapeworms and the human blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni. b A high level of conservation among chromosomes, but within chromosomes there is little apparent synteny among the scaffolds. c Their chromosomes are represented by the deduced ancestral linkage groups (‘Nigon’ units) from which we infer that the H. microstoma karyotype resulted from the fusion of individual chromosomes still present in E. multilocularis and S. mansoni
Fig. 4Chromosomal FISH of telomere repeats. Both panels show chromosomal fluorescent in situ hybridisation using probes against the canonical telomere sequence (TTAGGGx7). a In haploid spermatozoa, only one focus is visible for each of the six chromosomes (arrows), whereas two foci per chromosome (= 12) would be expected if telomeric repeats were present on both ends. b A metaphase figure shows chromatids joined at their centromeric ends, which lack probe signal, whereas probe is visible at the opposing ends of each sister chromatid (arrows)