Abstract

The spiny dogfish shark (Squalus acanthias) is one of the most commonly used cartilaginous fishes in biological research, especially in the fields of nitrogen metabolism, ion transporters and osmoregulation. Nonetheless, transcriptomic data for this organism is scarce. In the present study, a multi-tissue RNA-seq experiment and de novo transcriptome assembly was performed in four different spiny dogfish tissues (brain, liver, kidney and ovary), providing an annotated sequence resource. The characterization of the transcriptome greatly increases the scarce sequence information for shark species. Reads were assembled with the Trinity de novo assembler both within each tissue and across all tissues combined resulting in 362,690 transcripts in the combined assembly which represent 289,515 Trinity genes. BUSCO analysis determined a level of 87% completeness for the combined transcriptome. In total, 123,110 proteins were predicted of which 78,679 and 83,164 had significant hits against the SwissProt and Uniref90 protein databases, respectively. Additionally, 61,215 proteins aligned to known protein domains, 7,208 carried a signal peptide and 15,971 possessed at least one transmembrane region. Based on the annotation, 81,582 transcripts were assigned to gene ontology terms and 42,078 belong to known clusters of orthologous groups (eggNOG). To demonstrate the value of our molecular resource, we show that the improved transcriptome data enhances the current possibilities of osmoregulation research in spiny dogfish by utilizing the novel gene and protein annotations to investigate a set of genes involved in urea synthesis and urea, ammonia and water transport, all of them crucial in osmoregulation. We describe the presence of different gene copies and isoforms of key enzymes involved in this process, including arginases and transporters of urea and ammonia, for which sequence information is currently absent in the databases for this model species. The transcriptome assemblies and the derived annotations generated in this study will support the ongoing research for this particular animal model and provides a new molecular tool to assist biological research in cartilaginous fishes.

Highlights

  • Marine cartilaginous fishes such as Squalus acanthias are ureotelic organisms which synthetize and excrete urea as the final product of the nitrogen metabolism

  • About 600 million raw reads were generated for spiny dogfish using the Illumina HiSeq2000 platform

  • The number of significant unique hits (e-value cut-off 1e-20) in elephant shark that were covered by 70% of their length by a Tissue Brain Kidney Liver Ovary Total

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Marine cartilaginous fishes such as Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish) are ureotelic organisms which synthetize and excrete urea as the final product of the nitrogen metabolism They are ureosmotic organisms with urea being the main osmolite. They retain large amounts of urea in their plasma in order to increase the osmolarity and maintain their body fluids isosmotic or slightly hyperosmotic with respect to sea water. This mechanism is in part facilitated by their unique kidney morphology coupled with the presence of several metabolite transporters such as urea transporters (UTs), Rh-glycoproteins, aquaporins as well as the Na+, K+ and Cl- reabsorption levels [2, 12, 14, 16, 17]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call