| Literature DB >> 33545087 |
Kun Wang1, Jun Wang2, Chenglong Zhu3, Liandong Yang4, Yandong Ren3, Jue Ruan5, Guangyi Fan6, Jiang Hu7, Wenjie Xu1, Xupeng Bi8, Youan Zhu9, Yue Song10, Huatao Chen11, Tiantian Ma11, Ruoping Zhao12, Haifeng Jiang4, Bin Zhang13, Chenguang Feng1, Yuan Yuan1, Xiaoni Gan4, Yongxin Li1, Honghui Zeng4, Qun Liu10, Yaolei Zhang10, Feng Shao14, Shijie Hao10, He Zhang10, Xun Xu8, Xin Liu10, Depeng Wang7, Min Zhu9, Guojie Zhang15, Wenming Zhao16, Qiang Qiu17, Shunping He18, Wen Wang19.
Abstract
Lungfishes are the closest extant relatives of tetrapods and preserve ancestral traits linked with the water-to-land transition. However, their huge genome sizes have hindered understanding of this key transition in evolution. Here, we report a 40-Gb chromosome-level assembly of the African lungfish (Protopterus annectens) genome, which is the largest genome assembly ever reported and has a contig and chromosome N50 of 1.60 Mb and 2.81 Gb, respectively. The large size of the lungfish genome is due mainly to retrotransposons. Genes with ultra-long length show similar expression levels to other genes, indicating that lungfishes have evolved high transcription efficacy to keep gene expression balanced. Together with transcriptome and experimental data, we identified potential genes and regulatory elements related to such terrestrial adaptation traits as pulmonary surfactant, anxiolytic ability, pentadactyl limbs, and pharyngeal remodeling. Our results provide insights and key resources for understanding the evolutionary pathway leading from fishes to humans.Entities:
Keywords: aestivation; ancestral karyotype; anxiolytic ability; huge genome size; lungfishes; pentadactyl limbs; pharyngeal remodeling; pulmonary surfactant; water-to-land transition
Year: 2021 PMID: 33545087 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.01.047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582