Abstract

The minute marine rotifer Proales similis is a potential model species for ecotoxicological and ecophysiological studies. Therefore, the provision of whole-genome data for P. similis is an easy way to deepen understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in response to various environmental stressors. In this research, we assembled the whole-genome sequence (32.7 Mb total, N50 = 2.42 Mb) of P. similis, consisting of 15 contigs with 10,785 annotated genes. To understand the ligand–receptor signaling pathway in rotifers in response to environmental cues, we identified 401 G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) genes in the P. similis genome and compared them with those from other species. The 401 full-length GPCR genes were classified into five distinct classes: A (363), B (18), C (7), F (2), and other (11). Most GPCR gene families have undergone sporadic evolutionary processes. However, some classes were highly conserved between species. Overall, this result provides new information about GPCR-based signaling pathways and the evolution of GPCRs in the minute rotifer P. similis, and it expands our knowledge of ligand–receptor signaling pathways in response to various environmental cues.

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