Abstract

BackgroundThe tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is a species of extraordinary zoological interest, being the only surviving member of an entire order of reptiles which diverged early in amniote evolution. In addition to their unique phylogenetic placement, many aspects of tuatara biology, including temperature-dependent sex determination, cold adaptation and extreme longevity have the potential to inform studies of genome evolution and development. Despite increasing interest in the tuatara genome, genomic resources for the species are still very limited. We aimed to address this by assembling a transcriptome for tuatara from an early-stage embryo, which will provide a resource for genome annotation, molecular marker development and studies of development and adaptation in tuatara.ResultsWe obtained 30 million paired-end 50 bp reads from an Illumina Genome Analyzer and assembled them with Velvet and Oases using a range of kmers. After removing redundancy and filtering out low quality transcripts, our transcriptome dataset contained 32911 transcripts, with an N50 of 675 and a mean length of 451 bp. Almost 50% (15965) of these transcripts could be annotated by comparison with the NCBI non-redundant (NR) protein database or the chicken, green anole and zebrafish UniGene sets. A scan of candidate genes and repetitive elements revealed genes involved in immune function, sex differentiation and temperature-sensitivity, as well as over 200 microsatellite markers.ConclusionsThis dataset represents a major increase in genomic resources for the tuatara, increasing the number of annotated gene sequences from just 60 to almost 16,000. This will facilitate future research in sex determination, genome evolution, local adaptation and population genetics of tuatara, as well as inform studies on amniote evolution.

Highlights

  • The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is a species of extraordinary zoological interest, being the only surviving member of an entire order of reptiles which diverged early in amniote evolution

  • Previous studies have used transcriptome datasets to identify candidate genes for biologically important traits [3,4], genes involved in adaptation to specific environments [5,6], and to develop microsatellite and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers for genomic mapping and population genetic surveys [7,8]

  • Our study provides a first insight into the tuatara transcriptome, increasing the number of annotated tuatara mRNA sequences from 60 to almost 16,000

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Summary

Introduction

The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is a species of extraordinary zoological interest, being the only surviving member of an entire order of reptiles which diverged early in amniote evolution. In addition to their unique phylogenetic placement, many aspects of tuatara biology, including temperature-dependent sex determination, cold adaptation and extreme longevity have the potential to inform studies of genome evolution and development. The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is a species of extraordinary evolutionary and physiological interest, yet has few existing genomic resources They are the only surviving member of the reptilian order Rhynchocephalia ( known as Sphenodontia), which diverged from other reptilian orders approximately 250 million years ago. Rynchocephalids are regarded as the sister group of the squamates, based on morphological and genetic analyses [9,10] and were globally widespread until the late Cretaceous (65–80 million years ago) [11]

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