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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38645265

ABSTRACT

Seahorses, pipefishes, and seadragons are fishes from the family Syngnathidae that have evolved extraordinary traits including male pregnancy, elongated snouts, loss of teeth, and dermal bony armor. The developmental genetic and cellular changes that led to the evolution of these traits are largely unknown. Recent syngnathid genomes revealed suggestive gene content differences and provide the opportunity for detailed genetic analyses. We created a single cell RNA sequencing atlas of Gulf pipefish embryos to understand the developmental basis of four traits: derived head shape, toothlessness, dermal armor, and male pregnancy. We completed marker gene analyses, built genetic networks, and examined spatial expression of select genes. We identified osteochondrogenic mesenchymal cells in the elongating face that express regulatory genes bmp4, sfrp1a, and prdm16. We found no evidence for tooth primordia cells, and we observed re-deployment of osteoblast genetic networks in developing dermal armor. Finally, we found that epidermal cells expressed nutrient processing and environmental sensing genes, potentially relevant for the brooding environment. The examined pipefish evolutionary innovations are composed of recognizable cell types, suggesting derived features originate from changes within existing gene networks. Future work addressing syngnathid gene networks across multiple stages and species is essential for understanding how their novelties evolved.

2.
GigaByte ; 2023: gigabyte76, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36969711

ABSTRACT

The Gulf pipefish Syngnathus scovelli has emerged as an important species for studying sexual selection, development, and physiology. Comparative evolutionary genomics research involving fishes from Syngnathidae depends on having a high-quality genome assembly and annotation. However, the first S. scovelli genome assembled using short-read sequences and a smaller RNA-sequence dataset has limited contiguity and a relatively poor annotation. Here, using PacBio long-read high-fidelity sequences and a proximity ligation library, we generate an improved assembly to obtain 22 chromosome-level scaffolds. Compared to the first assembly, the gaps in the improved assembly are smaller, the N75 is larger, and our genome is ~95% BUSCO complete. Using a large body of RNA-Seq reads from different tissue types and NCBI's Eukaryotic Annotation Pipeline, we discovered 28,162 genes, of which 8,061 are non-coding genes. Our new genome assembly and annotation are tagged as a RefSeq genome by NCBI and provide enhanced resources for research work involving S. scovelli..

3.
J Fish Biol ; 102(4): 844-855, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36647901

ABSTRACT

Gynogenetic embryos - those inheriting only maternal DNA - can be experimentally created by fertilizing eggs with radiation-treated sperm containing inactivated paternal chromosomes. Diploidy in the zygotes can be maintained through prevention of the second meiosis or restored by preventing the first mitosis after the maternal chromosome complement has been replicated. These gynogenetic organisms are useful in many fields including aquaculture, evolutionary biology and genomics. Although gynogenetic organisms have been created in numerous species, the completeness of uni-parental inheritance has often been assumed rather than thoroughly quantified across the genome. Instead, when tests of uni-parental inheritance occur, they typically rely on well-studied genetically determined phenotypes that represent a very small sub-set of the genome. Only assessing small genomic regions for paternal inheritance leaves the question of whether some paternal contributions to offspring might still have occurred. In this study, the authors quantify the efficacy of creating gynogenetic diploid three-spined stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus). To this end, the authors mirrored previous assessments of paternal contribution using well-studied genetically determined phenotypes including sex and genetically dominant morphological traits but expanded on previous studies using dense restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (RAD-seq) markers in parents and offspring to assess paternal inheritance genome-wide. In the gynogenetic diploids, the authors found no male genotypes underlying their phenotypes of interest - sex and dominant phenotypic traits. Using genome-wide assessments of paternal contribution, nevertheless, the authors found evidence of a small, yet potentially important, amount of paternally "leaked" genetic material. The application of this genome-wide approach identifies the need for more widespread assessment of paternal contributions to gynogenetic animals and promises benefits for many aspects of aquaculture, evolutionary biology and genomics.


Subject(s)
Semen , Smegmamorpha , Male , Animals , Genome , Ploidies , Chromosomes , Smegmamorpha/genetics , Genetic Markers
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(26): e2119602119, 2022 06 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35733255

ABSTRACT

Seadragons are a remarkable lineage of teleost fishes in the family Syngnathidae, renowned for having evolved male pregnancy. Comprising three known species, seadragons are widely recognized and admired for their fantastical body forms and coloration, and their specific habitat requirements have made them flagship representatives for marine conservation and natural history interests. Until recently, a gap has been the lack of significant genomic resources for seadragons. We have produced gene-annotated, chromosome-scale genome models for the leafy and weedy seadragon to advance investigations of evolutionary innovation and elaboration of morphological traits in seadragons as well as their pipefish and seahorse relatives. We identified several interesting features specific to seadragon genomes, including divergent noncoding regions near a developmental gene important for integumentary outgrowth, a high genome-wide density of repetitive DNA, and recent expansions of transposable elements and a vesicular trafficking gene family. Surprisingly, comparative analyses leveraging the seadragon genomes and additional syngnathid and outgroup genomes revealed striking, syngnathid-specific losses in the family of fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), which likely involve reorganization of highly conserved gene regulatory networks in ways that have not previously been documented in natural populations. The resources presented here serve as important tools for future evolutionary studies of developmental processes in syngnathids and hold value for conservation of the extravagant seadragons and their relatives.


Subject(s)
Genome , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Smegmamorpha , Animals , Fibroblast Growth Factors/genetics , Genomics , Male , Phylogeny , Smegmamorpha/anatomy & histology , Smegmamorpha/classification , Smegmamorpha/genetics
5.
Genetics ; 220(3)2022 03 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35143654

ABSTRACT

Single-cell RNA sequencing is a powerful technique that continues to expand across various biological applications. However, incomplete 3'-UTR annotations can impede single-cell analysis resulting in genes that are partially or completely uncounted. Performing single-cell RNA sequencing with incomplete 3'-UTR annotations can hinder the identification of cell identities and gene expression patterns and lead to erroneous biological inferences. We demonstrate that performing single-cell isoform sequencing in tandem with single-cell RNA sequencing can rapidly improve 3'-UTR annotations. Using threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus), we show that gene models resulting from a minimal embryonic single-cell isoform sequencing dataset retained 26.1% greater single-cell RNA sequencing reads than gene models from Ensembl alone. Furthermore, pooling our single-cell sequencing isoforms with a previously published adult bulk Iso-Seq dataset from stickleback, and merging the annotation with the Ensembl gene models, resulted in a marginal improvement (+0.8%) over the single-cell isoform sequencing only dataset. In addition, isoforms identified by single-cell isoform sequencing included thousands of new splicing variants. The improved gene models obtained using single-cell isoform sequencing led to successful identification of cell types and increased the reads identified of many genes in our single-cell RNA sequencing stickleback dataset. Our work illuminates single-cell isoform sequencing as a cost-effective and efficient mechanism to rapidly annotate genomes for single-cell RNA sequencing.


Subject(s)
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Smegmamorpha , 3' Untranslated Regions , Animals , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Single-Cell Analysis , Smegmamorpha/genetics
6.
Trends Genet ; 38(1): 22-44, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34334238

ABSTRACT

Model organism research is essential to understand disease mechanisms. However, laboratory-induced genetic models can lack genetic variation and often fail to mimic the spectrum of disease severity. Evolutionary mutant models (EMMs) are species with evolved phenotypes that mimic human disease. EMMs complement traditional laboratory models by providing unique avenues to study gene-by-environment interactions, modular mutations in noncoding regions, and their evolved compensations. EMMs have improved our understanding of complex diseases, including cancer, diabetes, and aging, and illuminated mechanisms in many organs. Rapid advancements of sequencing and genome-editing technologies have catapulted the utility of EMMs, particularly in fish. Fish are the most diverse group of vertebrates, exhibiting a kaleidoscope of specialized phenotypes, many that would be pathogenic in humans but are adaptive in the species' specialized habitat. Importantly, evolved compensations can suggest avenues for novel disease therapies. This review summarizes current research using fish EMMs to advance our understanding of human disease.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Fishes , Animals , Fishes/genetics , Humans , Phenotype , Vertebrates
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