Abstract

BackgroundThe re-sequencing of C. angulata has revealed many polymorphisms in candidate genes related to adaptation to abiotic stress that are not present in C. gigas; these genes, therefore, are probably related to the ability of this oyster to retain high concentrations of toxic heavy metals. There is, in addition, an unresolved controversy as to whether or not C. angulata and C. gigas are the same species or subspecies. Both oysters have 20 metacentric chromosomes of similar size that are morphologically indistinguishable. From a genomic perspective, as a result of the great variation and selection for heterozygotes in C. gigas, the assembly of its draft genome was difficult: it is fragmented in more than seven thousand scaffolds.ResultsIn this work sixty BAC sequences of C. gigas downloaded from NCBI were assembled in BAC-contigs and assigned to BACs that were used as probes for mFISH in C. angulata and C. gigas. In addition, probes of H3, H4 histone, 18S and 5S rDNA genes were also used. Hence we obtained markers identifying 8 out the 10 chromosomes constituting the karyotype. Chromosomes 1 and 9 can be distinguished morphologically. The bioinformatic analysis carried out with the BAC-contigs annotated 88 genes. As a result, genes associated with abiotic adaptation, such as metallothioneins, have been positioned in the genome. The gene ontology analysis has also shown many molecular functions related to metal ion binding, a phenomenon associated with detoxification processes that are characteristic in oysters. Hence the provisional integrated map obtained in this study is a useful complementary tool for the study of oyster genomes.ConclusionsIn this study 8 out of 10 chromosome pairs of Crassostrea angulata/gigas were identified using BAC clones as probes. As a result all chromosomes can now be distinguished. Moreover, FISH showed that H3 and H4 co-localized in two pairs of chromosomes different that those previously escribed. 88 genes were annotated in the BAC-contigs most of them related with Molecular Functions of protein binding, related to the resistance of the species to abiotic stress. An integrated genetic map anchored to the genome has been obtained in which the BAC-contigs structure were not concordant with the gene structure of the C. gigas scaffolds displayed in the Genomicus database.

Highlights

  • The re-sequencing of C. angulata has revealed many polymorphisms in candidate genes related to adaptation to abiotic stress that are not present in C. gigas; these genes, are probably related to the ability of this oyster to retain high concentrations of toxic heavy metals

  • These sequences correspond to different bacterial artificial chromosome clones (BAC) clones from a genetic library of C. gigas belonging to the Clemson University Genomics Institute (CUGI)

  • BAC-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) Sixty BAC sequences of C. gigas were downloaded from National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) and assembled in BAC-contigs by means of Seq-Man software (Lasergene, DNASTAR)

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Summary

Introduction

The re-sequencing of C. angulata has revealed many polymorphisms in candidate genes related to adaptation to abiotic stress that are not present in C. gigas; these genes, are probably related to the ability of this oyster to retain high concentrations of toxic heavy metals. Global annual production volume is uncertain, owing to taxonomic confusion in reports from China and other countries [2], but is conservatively estimated at 626,000 metric tons in 2016 [1]. Another Crassostrea species of interest is the Portuguese oyster, C. angulata (Lamarck, 1919); this species is an edible cupped oyster of major commercial importance and wide geographic distribution. Recent studies have shown that the Fujian oyster that has been harvested and cultivated for more than 2000 years in coastal river mouths and estuaries of southern China is C. angulata. Because of the commercial importance of Crassostrea species, a number of breeding programs have been initiated over the years, and substantial genetic and genomic knowledge has been accumulated [4,5,6,7,8,9], some important characteristics of genome organization remain unclear

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