Transcriptome sequencing of the endangered land snail Karaftohelix adamsi from the Island Ulleung: De novo assembly, annotation, valuation of fitness genes and SSR markers
Background The Bradybaenidae snail Karaftohelix adamsi is endemic to Korea, with the species tracked from Island Ulleung in North Gyeongsang Province of South Korea. K. adamsi has been classified under the Endangered Wildlife Class II species of Korea and poses a severe risk of extinction following...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Genes & genomics 2024, 46(7), , pp.851-870 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
The Bradybaenidae snail
Karaftohelix adamsi
is endemic to Korea, with the species tracked from Island Ulleung in North Gyeongsang Province of South Korea.
K. adamsi
has been classified under the Endangered Wildlife Class II species of Korea and poses a severe risk of extinction following habitat disturbances. With no available information at the DNA (genome) or mRNA (transcriptome) level for the species, conservation by utilizing informed molecular resources seems difficult.
Objective
In this study, we used the Illumina short-read sequencing and Trinity de novo assembly to draft the reference transcriptome of
K. adamsi.
Results
After assembly, 13,753 unigenes were obtained of which 10,511 were annotated to public databases (a maximum of 10,165 unigenes found homologs in PANM DB). A total of 6,351, 3,535, 358, and 3,407 unigenes were ascribed to the functional categories under KOG, GO, KEGG, and IPS, respectively. The transcripts such as the HSP 70, aquaporin, TLR, and MAPK, among others, were screened as putative functional resources for adaptation. DNA transposons were found to be thickly populated in comparison to retrotransposons in the assembled unigenes. Further, 2,164 SSRs were screened with the promiscuous presence of dinucleotide repeats such as AC/GT and AG/CT.
Conclusion
The transcriptome-guided discovery of molecular resources in
K. adamsi
will not only serve as a basis for functional genomics studies but also provide sustainable tools to be utilized for the protection of the species in the wild. Moreover, the development of polymorphic SSRs is valuable for the identification of species from newer habitats and cross-species genotyping. |
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ISSN: | 1976-9571 2092-9293 2092-9293 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13258-024-01511-z |