Teleosts comprise more than half of all vertebrate species and have adapted to a variety of marine and freshwater habitats 1 . Their genome evolution and diversification are important subjects for the understanding of vertebrate evolution. Although draft genome sequences of two pufferfishes have been published 2,3 , analysis of more fish genomes is desirable. Here we report a high-quality draft genome sequence of a small egg-laying freshwater teleost, medaka (Oryzias latipes). Medaka is native to East Asia and an excellent model system for a wide range of biology, including ecotoxicology, carcinogenesis, sex determination 4-6 and developmental genetics 7 . In the assembled medaka genome (700 megabases), which is less than half of the zebrafish genome, we predicted 20,141 genes, including 2,900 new genes, using 59-end serial analysis of gene expression tag information. We found single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at an average rate of 3.42% between the two inbred strains derived from two regional populations; this is the highest SNP rate seen in any vertebrate species. Analyses based on the dense SNP information show a strict genetic separation of 4 million years (Myr) between the two populations, and suggest that differential selective pressures acted on specific gene categories. Four-way comparisons with the human, pufferfish (Tetraodon), zebrafish and medaka genomes revealed that eight major interchromosomal rearrangements took place in a remarkably short period of 50 Myr after the whole-genome duplication event in the teleost ancestor and afterwards, intriguingly, the medaka genome preserved its ancestral karyotype for more than 300 Myr.We applied the whole-genome shotgun approach to an inbred strain, , derived from the southern Japanese population, as the main target. A total of 13.8 million reads amounting to approximately 10.6-fold genome coverage were obtained from the shotgun plasmid, fosmid and bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries. A newly developed RAMEN assembler was used to process the shotgun reads to generate contigs and scaffolds. The N50 values (50% of nucleotides in an assembly are in scaffolds-or contigs-longer than or equal to the N50 value) are ,1.41 megabases (Mb) for scaffolds and ,9.8 kilobases (Kb) for contigs. The total length of the contigs reached 700.4 Mb, which, from now on, we refer to as the medaka genome size.To construct ultracontigs, the scaffolds were integrated with the medaka genetic map by using SNP markers. For this purpose, we further obtained about 2.8-fold coverage of shotgun reads from another inbred strain HNI (refs 9, 10), which is derived from the northern Japanese population. The reads were assembled by RAMEN to scaffolds covering 648 Mb. Aligning the HNI contigs with the HdrR genome using BLASTZ 11 , we identified 16.4 million SNPs as well as 1.40 million insertions and 1.45 million deletions in non-repetitive regions (Supplementary Table 2). We selected 2,401 SNPs and genetically mapped them onto medaka chromosomes using a backcross panel between the...
Although several vertebrate genomes have been sequenced, little is known about the genome evolution of early vertebrates and how large-scale genomic changes such as the two rounds of whole-genome duplications (2R WGD) affected evolutionary complexity and novelty in vertebrates. Reconstructing the ancestral vertebrate genome is highly nontrivial because of the difficulty in identifying traces originating from the 2R WGD. To resolve this problem, we developed a novel method capable of pinning down remains of the 2R WGD in the human and medaka fish genomes using invertebrate tunicate and sea urchin genes to define ohnologs, i.e., paralogs produced by the 2R WGD. We validated the reconstruction using the chicken genome, which was not considered in the reconstruction step, and observed that many ancestral proto-chromosomes were retained in the chicken genome and had one-to-one correspondence to chicken microchromosomes, thereby confirming the reconstructed ancestral genomes. Our reconstruction revealed a contrast between the slow karyotype evolution after the second WGD and the rapid, lineage-specific genome reorganizations that occurred in the ancestral lineages of major taxonomic groups such as teleost fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and marsupials.[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]Early vertebrate genome evolution has long been in need of clarification, and it is now of particular interest because several distantly related vertebrate genomes were recently sequenced. The 2R hypothesis postulates that two rounds of whole-genome duplication (2R WGD) occurred at the base of the vertebrate lineage (Ohno 1970;Holland et al. 1994) because of the observation that invertebrates have one Hox gene cluster, whereas lobe-finned fishes and land vertebrates have four clusters. However, the 2R hypothesis has been quite controversial until recently (Skrabanek and
SummaryCilia/flagella are highly conserved organelles that play diverse roles in cell motility and sensing extracellular signals. Motility defects in cilia/flagella often result in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD). However, the mechanisms underlying cilia formation and function, and in particular the cytoplasmic assembly of dyneins that power ciliary motility, are only poorly understood. Here we report a novel gene, kintoun (ktu), involved in this cytoplasmic process. This gene was first identified in a medaka mutant, and found to be mutated in PCD patients from two affected families as well as in the pf13 mutant of Chlamydomonas. In the absence of Ktu/PF13, both outer and inner dynein arms are missing or defective in the axoneme, leading to a loss of motility. Biochemical and immunohistochemical studies show that Ktu/PF13 is one of the long-sought proteins involved in pre-assembly of dynein arm complexes in the cytoplasm before intraflagellar transport loads them for the ciliary compartment.
Periodic somite segmentation in vertebrate embryos is controlled by the 'segmentation clock', which consists of numerous cellular oscillators. Although the properties of a single oscillator, driven by a hairy negative-feedback loop, have been investigated, the system-level properties of the segmentation clock remain largely unknown. To explore these characteristics, we have examined the response of a normally oscillating clock in zebrafish to experimental stimuli using in vivo mosaic experiments and mathematical simulation. We demonstrate that the segmentation clock behaves as a coupled oscillator, by showing that Notch-dependent intercellular communication, the activity of which is regulated by the internal hairy oscillator, couples neighbouring cells to facilitate synchronized oscillation. Furthermore, the oscillation phase of individual oscillators fluctuates due to developmental noise such as stochastic gene expression and active cell proliferation. The intercellular coupling was found to have a crucial role in minimizing the effects of this noise to maintain coherent oscillation.
Inelastic scattering from12 C has been measured at the extremely forward angles including 0• using 386 MeV α particles to study the α-cluster states around Ex ∼ 10 MeV, especially the 2 + state predicted by the α-cluster model. We have analyzed the (α,α ′ ) cross-section data using both the peak-fitting and the multipole decomposition techniques. A 2 + state at Ex = 9.84 ± 0.06 MeV with a width of 1.01 ± 0.15 MeV is found to be submerged in the broad 0 + state at Ex = 9.93 ± 0.03 MeV with a width of 2.71 ± 0.08 MeV. This 2 + state may be interpreted as the 2 + excitation of the Hoyle state and the α-condensate state.
The reiterated structures of the vertebrate axial skeleton, spinal nervous system and body muscle are based on the metameric structure of somites, which are formed in a dynamic morphogenetic process. Somite segmentation requires the activity of a biochemical oscillator known as the somite-segmentation clock. Although the molecular identity of the clock remains unknown, genetic and experimental evidence has accumulated that indicates how the periodicity of somite formation is generated, how the positions of segment borders are determined, and how the rostrocaudal polarity within somite primordia is generated.
Group B1 Sox genes encode HMG domain transcription factors that play major roles in neural development. We have identified six zebrafish B1 sox genes, which include pan-vertebrate sox1a/b, sox2, and sox3, and also fish-specific sox19a/b. SOX19A/B proteins show a transcriptional activation potential that is similar to other B1 SOX proteins. The expression of sox19a and sox3 begins at approximately the 1,000-cell stage during embryogenesis and becomes confined to the future ectoderm by the shield stage. This is reminiscent of the epiblastic expression of Sox2 and/or Sox3 in amniotes. As development progresses, these six B1 sox genes display unique expression patterns that overlap distinctly from one region to another. sox19a expression is widespread in the early neuroectoderm, resembling pan-neural Sox2 expression in amniotes, whereas zebrafish sox2 shows anterior-restricted expression. Comparative genomics suggests that sox19a/b and mammalian Sox15 (group G) have an orthologous relationship and that the B1/G Sox genes arose from a common ancestral gene through two rounds of genome duplication. It seems likely, therefore, that each B1/G Sox gene has gained a distinct expression profile and function during vertebrate evolution. Developmental Dynamics 235:811-825, 2006.
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