4.3 Article

De NovoAssembly of the Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) Genome Reveals Candidate Regulatory Regions for Sexually Dichromatic Red Plumage Coloration

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 3541-3548

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/g3.120.401373

Keywords

AllPaths-LG; Cis-regulatory elements; Ketocarotenoid pigments; Transcription factors

Funding

  1. Putnam Expedition Grants through Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University

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Northern cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis) are common, mid-sized passerines widely distributed in North America. As an iconic species with strong sexual dichromatism, it has been the focus of extensive ecological and evolutionary research, yet genomic studies investigating the evolution of genotype-phenotype association of plumage coloration and dichromatism are lacking. Here we present a new, highly-contiguous assembly forC. cardinalis. We generated a 1.1 Gb assembly comprised of 4,762 scaffolds, with a scaffold N50 of 3.6 Mb, a contig N50 of 114.4 kb and a longest scaffold of 19.7 Mb. We identified 93.5% complete and single-copy orthologs from an Aves dataset using BUSCO, demonstrating high completeness of the genome assembly. We annotated the genomic region comprising theCYP2J19gene, which plays a pivotal role in the red coloration in birds. Comparative analyses demonstrated non-exonic regions unique to theCYP2J19gene in passerines and a long insertion upstream of the gene inC. cardinalis. Transcription factor binding motifs discovered in the unique insertion region inC. cardinalissuggest potential androgen-regulated mechanisms underlying sexual dichromatism. Pairwise Sequential Markovian Coalescent (PSMC) analysis of the genome reveals fluctuations in historic effective population size between 100,000-250,000 in the last 2 millions years, with declines concordant with the beginning of the Pleistocene epoch and Last Glacial Period. This draft genome ofC. cardinalisprovides an important resource for future studies of ecological, evolutionary, and functional genomics in cardinals and other birds.

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