TY - JOUR
T1 - De novo genome assembly and genome skims reveal LTRs dominate the genome of a limestone endemic Mountainsnail (Oreohelix idahoensis)
AU - Linscott, T. Mason
AU - González-González, Andrea
AU - Hirano, Takahiro
AU - Parent, Christine E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Joel Sauder from Idaho Fish and Game for facilitating permits and aiding in sample collection. A special thanks are given to the University of Idaho Genomics Resource Core staff scientists Dan New and Matt Fagnan for their services and input on sequencing strategies. We would also like to thank Katy Munson from University of Washington PacBio Sequencing Services for Iso-Seq sample preparation and sequencing. We are grateful to Amanda Stahlke, Ian Oiler, Bernandette Johnson, Kelly Martin, and John G. Phillips for several helpful discussions related to this work. Additional thanks are given to Selkirk Wildlife Science for permitting early access to their Oreohelix sequencing data. Special thanks are given to Lusha Tronstad of the Wyoming Natural Heritage program for providing generation time estimates from her ongoing mark-recapture study of Oreohelix.
Funding Information:
This work was funded by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship program award to T. Mason Linscott (NSF 1842399). Research reported in this publication was also supported by an CAREER grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF 1751157) to Christine E. Parent. Additional sequencing was made possible through the NSF Idaho EPSCoR GEM3 Program under award number OIA-1757324 and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service under grant number F12AP01527 to Selkirk Wildlife Sciences. This work was supported in part by NIH COBRE Phase III grant P30GM103324.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Background: Calcareous outcrops, rocky areas composed of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), often host a diverse, specialized, and threatened biomineralizing fauna. Despite the repeated evolution of physiological and morphological adaptations to colonize these mineral rich substrates, there is a lack of genomic resources for calcareous rock endemic species. This has hampered our ability to understand the genomic mechanisms underlying calcareous rock specialization and manage these threatened species. Results: Here, we present a new draft genome assembly of the threatened limestone endemic land snail Oreohelix idahoensis and genome skim data for two other Oreohelix species. The O. idahoensis genome assembly (scaffold N50: 404.19 kb; 86.6% BUSCO genes) is the largest (~ 5.4 Gb) and most repetitive mollusc genome assembled to date (85.74% assembly size). The repetitive landscape was unusually dominated by an expansion of long terminal repeat (LTR) transposable elements (57.73% assembly size) which have shaped the evolution genome size, gene composition through retrotransposition of host genes, and ectopic recombination. Genome skims revealed repeat content is more than 2–3 fold higher in limestone endemic O. idahoensis compared to non-calcareous Oreohelix species. Gene family size analysis revealed stress and biomineralization genes have expanded significantly in the O. idahoensis genome. Conclusions: Hundreds of threatened land snail species are endemic to calcareous rock regions but there are very few genomic resources available to guide their conservation or determine the genomic architecture underlying CaCO3 resource specialization. Our study provides one of the first high quality draft genomes of a calcareous rock endemic land snail which will serve as a foundation for the conservation genomics of this threatened species and for other groups. The high proportion and activity of LTRs in the O. idahoensis genome is unprecedented in molluscan genomics and sheds new light how transposable element content can vary across molluscs. The genomic resources reported here will enable further studies of the genomic mechanisms underlying calcareous rock specialization and the evolution of transposable element content across molluscs.
AB - Background: Calcareous outcrops, rocky areas composed of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), often host a diverse, specialized, and threatened biomineralizing fauna. Despite the repeated evolution of physiological and morphological adaptations to colonize these mineral rich substrates, there is a lack of genomic resources for calcareous rock endemic species. This has hampered our ability to understand the genomic mechanisms underlying calcareous rock specialization and manage these threatened species. Results: Here, we present a new draft genome assembly of the threatened limestone endemic land snail Oreohelix idahoensis and genome skim data for two other Oreohelix species. The O. idahoensis genome assembly (scaffold N50: 404.19 kb; 86.6% BUSCO genes) is the largest (~ 5.4 Gb) and most repetitive mollusc genome assembled to date (85.74% assembly size). The repetitive landscape was unusually dominated by an expansion of long terminal repeat (LTR) transposable elements (57.73% assembly size) which have shaped the evolution genome size, gene composition through retrotransposition of host genes, and ectopic recombination. Genome skims revealed repeat content is more than 2–3 fold higher in limestone endemic O. idahoensis compared to non-calcareous Oreohelix species. Gene family size analysis revealed stress and biomineralization genes have expanded significantly in the O. idahoensis genome. Conclusions: Hundreds of threatened land snail species are endemic to calcareous rock regions but there are very few genomic resources available to guide their conservation or determine the genomic architecture underlying CaCO3 resource specialization. Our study provides one of the first high quality draft genomes of a calcareous rock endemic land snail which will serve as a foundation for the conservation genomics of this threatened species and for other groups. The high proportion and activity of LTRs in the O. idahoensis genome is unprecedented in molluscan genomics and sheds new light how transposable element content can vary across molluscs. The genomic resources reported here will enable further studies of the genomic mechanisms underlying calcareous rock specialization and the evolution of transposable element content across molluscs.
KW - Comparative genomics
KW - Gene family evolution
KW - Genome skim
KW - LTR expansion
KW - Limestone
KW - Oreohelix
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143154374&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85143154374&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12864-022-09000-x
DO - 10.1186/s12864-022-09000-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 36460988
AN - SCOPUS:85143154374
SN - 1471-2164
VL - 23
JO - BMC Genomics
JF - BMC Genomics
IS - 1
M1 - 796
ER -