Genomes of the Caribbean reef-building corals , and .

bioRxiv

Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Coral populations worldwide are rapidly declining due to factors like rising ocean temperatures and human activities, with the Caribbean facing a particularly high number of threatened coral species compared to the Indo-Pacific region.
  • Most genetic research has focused on Pacific corals, leaving a gap in understanding Caribbean coral adaptations and evolution; to address this, researchers utilized advanced sequencing technology to generate the first genome assemblies for three Caribbean reef-building corals.
  • The study revealed significant gene duplications in the corals' genomes, indicating unique evolutionary traits and offering insights into coral evolution and population genetics, which could help in conservation efforts.

Article Abstract

Corals populations worldwide are declining rapidly due to elevated ocean temperatures and other human impacts. The Caribbean harbors a high number of threatened, endangered, and critically endangered coral species compared to reefs of the larger Indo-Pacific. The reef corals of the Caribbean are also long diverged from their Pacific counterparts and may have evolved different survival strategies. Most genomic resources have been developed for Pacific coral species which may impede our ability to study the changes in genetic composition of Caribbean reef communities in response to global change. To help fill the gap in genomic resources, we used PacBio HiFi sequencing to generate the first genome assemblies for three Caribbean, reef-building corals, , and We also explore the genomic novelties that shape scleractinian genomes. Notably, we find abundant gene duplications of all classes (e.g., tandem and segmental), especially in This species has one of the largest genomes of any scleractinian coral (822Mb) which seems to be driven by repetitive content and gene family expansion and diversification. As the genome size of was double the size expected of stony corals, we also evaluated the possibility of an ancient whole genome duplication using Ks tests and found no evidence of such an event in the species. By presenting these genome assemblies, we hope to develop a better understanding of coral evolution as a whole and to enable researchers to further investigate the population genetics and diversity of these three species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11370458PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.21.608299DOI Listing

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