- Main
Chromosome-level genome assembly of a benthic associated Syngnathiformes species: the common dragonet, Callionymus lyra.
- Winter, Sven;
- Prost, Stefan;
- de Raad, Jordi;
- Coimbra, Raphael;
- Wolf, Magnus;
- Nebenführ, Marcel;
- Held, Annika;
- Kurzawe, Melina;
- Papapostolou, Ramona;
- Tessien, Jade;
- Bludau, Julian;
- Kelch, Andreas;
- Gronefeld, Sarah;
- Schöneberg, Yannis;
- Zeitz, Christian;
- Zapf, Konstantin;
- Prochotta, David;
- Murphy, Maximilian;
- Sheffer, Monica;
- Sonnewald, Moritz;
- Nilsson, Maria;
- Janke, Axel
- et al.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The common dragonet, Callionymus lyra, is one of three Callionymus species inhabiting the North Sea. All three species show strong sexual dimorphism. The males show strong morphological differentiation, e.g., species-specific colouration and size relations, while the females of different species have few distinguishing characters. Callionymus belongs to the benthic associated clade of the order Syngnathiformes. The benthic associated clade so far is not represented by genome data and serves as an important outgroup to understand the morphological transformation in long-snouted syngnatiformes such as seahorses and pipefishes. FINDINGS: Here, we present the chromosome-level genome assembly of C. lyra. We applied Oxford Nanopore Technologies long-read sequencing, short-read DNBseq, and proximity-ligation-based scaffolding to generate a high-quality genome assembly. The resulting assembly has a contig N50 of 2.2 Mbp and a scaffold N50 of 26.7 Mbp. The total assembly length is 568.7 Mbp, of which over 538 Mbp were scaffolded into 19 chromosome-length scaffolds. The identification of 94.5% complete BUSCO genes indicates high assembly completeness. Additionally, we sequenced and assembled a multi-tissue transcriptome with a total length of 255.5 Mbp that was used to aid the annotation of the genome assembly. The annotation resulted in 19,849 annotated transcripts and identified a repeat content of 27.7%. CONCLUSIONS: The chromosome-level assembly of C. lyra provides a high-quality reference genome for future population genomic, phylogenomic, and phylogeographic analyses.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-