2019
DOI: 10.1101/685743
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The whale shark genome reveals patterns of vertebrate gene family evolution

Abstract: Due to their key phylogenetic position, cartilaginous fishes, which includes the largest fish species Rhincodon typus (whale shark), are an important vertebrate lineage for understanding the origin and evolution of vertebrates. However, until recently, this lineage has been understudied in vertebrate genomics. Using newly-generated long read sequences, we produced the best gapless cartilaginous fish genome assembly to date. The assembly has fewer missing ancestral genes than Callorhinchus milii , which has bee… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 152 publications
(244 reference statements)
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“…Later, in the other subclass Elasmobranchii, genome sequence information of two orectolobiform shark species (brownbanded bamboo shark Chiloscyllium punctatum and whale shark Rhincodon typus), one lamniform species (white shark Carcharodon carcharias) and one carcharhiniform species (cloudy catshark Scyliorhinus torazame) became available (Hara, Yamaguchi, et al, 2018;Marra et al, 2019;Read et al, 2017;Tan et al, 2019), which ascertained the consistent absence of SWS1 and SWS2 in these shark species (Figure 1).…”
Section: G Enomi C Surve Y Of Ops In G Ene Repertoire Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Later, in the other subclass Elasmobranchii, genome sequence information of two orectolobiform shark species (brownbanded bamboo shark Chiloscyllium punctatum and whale shark Rhincodon typus), one lamniform species (white shark Carcharodon carcharias) and one carcharhiniform species (cloudy catshark Scyliorhinus torazame) became available (Hara, Yamaguchi, et al, 2018;Marra et al, 2019;Read et al, 2017;Tan et al, 2019), which ascertained the consistent absence of SWS1 and SWS2 in these shark species (Figure 1).…”
Section: G Enomi C Surve Y Of Ops In G Ene Repertoire Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additional cDNA sequences were obtained by screening accessible transcriptomic data collected by the SkateBase project 1 [little skate Leucoraja erinacea transcriptome (Contig Build-2, GEO:GSM643957) and small-spotted catshark transcriptome (GEO:GSM643958)] using TBLASTN. Small-spotted catshark, little skate, and thornback ray sequences were then used to screen other databases for elephant shark genome assembly (GCA_000165045.2 Callorhinchus_milii-6.1.3) ( Venkatesh et al, 2014 ) and whale shark genome Rhincodon typus (GCA_001642345.2 ASM164234v2) ( Tan et al, 2019 ). Thornback ray, small-spotted catshark, and little skate cDNA sequences were used to map synteny on the thorny skate Amblyraja radiata and the smalltooth sawfish Pristis pectinata draft assembled genomes using TBLASTN [data accessed from, and analyzed in agreement with, Vertebrate Genome Project ( Rhie et al, 2020 ), PriPec2.pri, GCA_009764475.1].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relative to mammals, teleost fish genomes also exhibit considerable expansions within the gene families encoding NLR (15) and TRIM ( 16) proteins. In contrast, RLR repertoires are highly conserved across vertebrates (14).…”
Section: Innate Immune Receptor Repertoires Are Surprisingly Diverse Among Vertebratesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…13). Analysis of these sequences suggests that the ancestor of jawed vertebrates possessed a much larger TLR repertoire (19 genes) than most modern species (14). In addition, data suggest that the TLR repertoires within the extant jawed vertebrates are the result of lineage-specific diversification, differential gene loss, and gene duplication events.…”
Section: Innate Immune Receptor Repertoires Are Surprisingly Diverse Among Vertebratesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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