Characterization of the A ntarctic sea urchin ( S terechinus neumayeri ) transcriptome and mitogenome: a molecular resource for phylogenetics, ecophysiology and global change biology
This is the first de novo transcriptome and complete mitochondrial genome of an A ntarctic sea urchin species sequenced to date. S terechinus neumayeri is an Antarctic sea urchin and a model species for ecology, development, physiology and global change biology. To identify transcripts important to...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular ecology resources 2015-03, Vol.15 (2), p.425-436 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This is the first
de novo
transcriptome and complete mitochondrial genome of an
A
ntarctic sea urchin species sequenced to date.
S
terechinus neumayeri
is an Antarctic sea urchin and a model species for ecology, development, physiology and global change biology. To identify transcripts important to ocean acidification (
OA
) and thermal stress, this transcriptome was created pooling, and 13 larval samples representing developmental stages on day 11 (late gastrula), 19 (early pluteus) and 30 (mid pluteus) maintained at three CO
2
levels (421, 652, and 1071
μ
atm) as well as four additional heat‐shocked samples. The normalized c
DNA
pool was sequenced using emulsion
PCR
(pyrosequencing) resulting in 1.34M reads with an average read length of 492 base pairs. 40 994 isotigs were identified, averaging 1188 bp with a median coverage of 11×. Additional primer design and gap sequencing were required to complete the mitochondrial genome. The mitogenome of
S. neumayeri
is a circular
DNA
molecule with a length of 15 684 bp that contains all 37 genes normally found in metazoans. We detail the main features of the transcriptome and the mitogenome architecture and investigate the phylogenetic relationships of
S. neumayeri
within Echinoidea. In addition, we provide comparative analyses of
S. neumayeri
with its closest relative,
Strongylocentrotus purpuratus
, including a list of potential
OA
gene targets. The resources described here will support a variety of quantitative (genomic, proteomic, multistress and comparative) studies to interrogate physiological responses to
OA
and other stressors in this important Antarctic calcifier. |
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ISSN: | 1755-098X 1755-0998 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1755-0998.12316 |