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Genomic comparison of the temperate coral Astrangia poculata with tropical corals yields insights into winter quiescence, innate immunity, and sexual reproduction
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Stankiewicz, Kathryn H. (Author)
- Guiglielmoni, Nadège (Author)
- Kitchen, Sheila A. (Author)
- Flot, Jean-François (Author)
- Barott, Katie L. (Author)
- Davies, Sarah W. (Author)
- Finnerty, John R. (Author)
- Grace, Sean P. (Author)
- Kaufman, Leslie S. (Author)
- Putnam, Hollie M. (Author)
- Rotjan, Randi D. (Author)
- Sharp, Koty H. (Author)
- Baums, Iliana B. (Author)
Title
Genomic comparison of the temperate coral Astrangia poculata with tropical corals yields insights into winter quiescence, innate immunity, and sexual reproduction
Abstract
Facultatively symbiotic corals provide important experimental models to explore the establishment, maintenance, and breakdown of the mutualism between corals and members of the algal family Symbiodiniaceae. The temperate coral Astrangia poculata is one such model as it is not only facultatively symbiotic, but also occurs across a broad temperature and latitudinal gradient. Here, we report the de novo chromosome-scale assembly and annotation of the A. poculata genome. Though widespread segmental/tandem duplications of genomic regions were detected, we did not find strong evidence of a whole genome duplication (WGD) event. Comparison of the gene arrangement between A. poculata and the tropical coral Acropora millepora revealed 56.38% of the orthologous genes were conserved in syntenic blocks despite ∼415 million years of divergence. Gene families related to sperm hyperactivation and innate immunity, including lectins, were found to contain more genes in A. millepora relative to A. poculata. Sperm hyperactivation in A. millepora is expected given the extreme requirements of gamete competition during mass spawning events in tropical corals, while lectins are important in the establishment of coral-algal symbiosis. By contrast, gene families involved in sleep promotion, feeding suppression, and circadian sleep/wake cycle processes were expanded in A. poculata. These expanded gene families may play a role in A. poculata’s ability to enter a dormancy-like state (“winter quiescence”) to survive freezing temperatures at the northern edges of the species’ range.
Repository
bioRxiv
Date
2023-09-23
Citation Key
stankiewiczGenomicComparisonTemperate2023
Accessed
12/5/23, 5:03 PM
Language
en
Library Catalog
bioRxiv
License
© 2023, Posted by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. This pre-print is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International), CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Extra
Pages: 2023.09.22.558704
Section: New Results
Citation
Stankiewicz, K. H., Guiglielmoni, N., Kitchen, S. A., Flot, J.-F., Barott, K. L., Davies, S. W., Finnerty, J. R., Grace, S. P., Kaufman, L. S., Putnam, H. M., Rotjan, R. D., Sharp, K. H., & Baums, I. B. (2023). Genomic comparison of the temperate coral Astrangia poculata with tropical corals yields insights into winter quiescence, innate immunity, and sexual reproduction. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.22.558704
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