Abstract

BackgroundThe golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana) is an endangered colobine species endemic to China, which has several distinct traits including a unique social structure. Although a genome assembly for R. roxellana is available, it is incomplete and fragmented because it was constructed using short-read sequencing technology. Thus, important information such as genome structural variation and repeat sequences may be absent.FindingsTo obtain a high-quality chromosomal assembly for R. roxellana qinlingensis, we used 5 methods: Pacific Bioscience single-molecule real-time sequencing, Illumina paired-end sequencing, BioNano optical maps, 10X Genomics link-reads, and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture. The assembled genome was ∼3.04 Gb, with a contig N50 of 5.72 Mb and a scaffold N50 of 144.56 Mb. This represented a 100-fold improvement over the previously published genome. In the new genome, 22,497 protein-coding genes were predicted, of which 22,053 were functionally annotated. Gene family analysis showed that 993 and 2,745 gene families were expanded and contracted, respectively. The reconstructed phylogeny recovered a close relationship between R. rollexana and Macaca mulatta, and these 2 species diverged ∼13.4 million years ago.ConclusionWe constructed a high-quality genome assembly of the Qinling golden snub-nosed monkey; it had superior continuity and accuracy, which might be useful for future genetic studies in this species and as a new standard reference genome for colobine primates. In addition, the updated genome assembly might improve our understanding of this species and could assist conservation efforts.

Highlights

  • The golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana) is an endangered colobine species endemic to China, which has several distinct traits including a unique social structure

  • We constructed a high-quality genome assembly of the Qinling golden snub-nosed monkey; it had superior continuity and accuracy, which might be useful for future genetic studies in this species and as a new standard reference genome for colobine primates

  • We report a greatly improved assembly of the reference genome for R. roxellana generated by a combination of 5 technologies: singlemolecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing from Pacific Biosciences (PacBio), HiSeq paired-end sequencing from Illumina (HiSeq), BioNano optical maps (BioNano), 10X Genomics link-reads (10X Genomics), and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C)

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Summary

Background

The snub-nosed monkeys (genus Rhinopithecus) consist of 5 endangered species narrowly restricted to China and Vietnam [1]. Only a single genome assembly is available for the golden snub-nosed monkey This assembly, published in 2014, was derived from short sequencing reads generated by the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform [8]. Our results represent the first colobine genome sequenced and assembled with both long reads and short reads This updated genome assembly may allow us to further investigate R. roxellana, providing new opportunities to analyze evolutionary history and to identify genetic changes associated with the development of specific traits in this species. BUSCO analysis identified 4,104 mammalian BUSCOs in the newly assembled R. roxellana genome: 94.0% complete BUSCOs, 2.9% fragmented BUSCOs, and 3.1% missing BUSCOs (Supplementary Table S8). We found that the significantly expanded gene families were mainly associated with the hemoglobin complex, energy metabolism, and oxygen transport (Supplementary Table S16)

Conclusion
Findings
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