Abstract

BackgroundThe white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) is a globally distributed, apex predator possessing physical, physiological, and behavioral traits that have garnered it significant public attention. In addition to interest in the genetic basis of its form and function, as a representative of the oldest extant jawed vertebrate lineage, white sharks are also of conservation concern due to their small population size and threat from overfishing. Despite this, surprisingly little is known about the biology of white sharks, and genomic resources are unavailable. To address this deficit, we combined Roche-454 and Illumina sequencing technologies to characterize the first transciptome of any tissue for this species.ResultsFrom white shark heart cDNA we generated 665,399 Roche 454 reads (median length 387-bp) that were assembled into 141,626 contigs (mean length 503-bp). We also generated 78,566,588 Illumina reads, which we aligned to the 454 contigs producing 105,014 454/Illumina consensus sequences. To these, we added 3,432 non-singleton 454 contigs. By comparing these sequences to the UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot database we were able to annotate 21,019 translated open reading frames (ORFs) of ≥ 20 amino acids. Of these, 19,277 were additionally assigned Gene Ontology (GO) functional annotations. While acknowledging the limitations of our single tissue transcriptome, Fisher tests showed the white shark transcriptome to be significantly enriched for numerous metabolic GO terms compared to the zebra fish and human transcriptomes, with white shark showing more similarity to human than to zebra fish (i.e. fewer terms were significantly different). We also compared the transcriptome to other available elasmobranch sequences, for signatures of positive selection and identified several genes of putative adaptive significance on the white shark lineage. The white shark transcriptome also contained 8,404 microsatellites (dinucleotide, trinucleotide, or tetranucleotide motifs ≥ five perfect repeats). Detailed characterization of these microsatellites showed that ORFs with trinucleotide repeats, were significantly enriched for transcription regulatory roles and that trinucleotide frequency within ORFs was lower than for a wide range of taxonomic groups including other vertebrates.ConclusionThe white shark heart transcriptome represents a valuable resource for future elasmobranch functional and comparative genomic studies, as well as for population and other biological studies vital for effective conservation of this globally vulnerable species.

Highlights

  • The white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) is a globally distributed, apex predator possessing physical, physiological, and behavioral traits that have garnered it significant public attention

  • Roche 454 sequencing of the white shark heart cDNA produced 665,399 reads ranging in size from 100-931 bp for a total of 240,894,914 bp

  • The Molecular Function domain enriched terms described gene products that (i) interacted selectively and non-covalently with nucleic acids, and (ii) interacted selectively and non-covalently with specific DNA sequences in order to modulate transcription. These results suggest that white shark open reading frames (ORFs) containing trinucleotide repeats may have regulatory roles involved in the control of transcription

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Summary

Introduction

The white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) is a globally distributed, apex predator possessing physical, physiological, and behavioral traits that have garnered it significant public attention. Cartilaginous fishes (Class Chondrichthyes: sharks, skates, rays, chimaeras) provide a notable example of successful evolutionary perseverance, with a fossil record extending to at least the Lower Devonian over 400 million years ago [1] Given their extraordinary evolutionary history and basal phylogenetic origin relative to other jawed vertebrates, chondrichthyians have been proposed as an important comparative model for understanding vertebrate genome evolution in general and various specific evolutionary and mechanistic aspects of vertebrate development, physiology and immune function [2,3,4,5]. The handful of genome level studies conducted on sharks have already revealed some distinctive features, including the absence of the HoxC cluster of developmental pattern genes found in all other nonelasmobranch vertebrate lineages [7], and the presence of a substantial number of expressed sequence tags for which no homologues in other organisms could be identified [8]. These apparent distinctions hint that other genomic novelties are possible in this lineage and await discovery

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