4.7 Article

A chromosome-level genome assembly of Cairina moschata and comparative genomic analyses

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-021-07897-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [31702109]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [2662017JC027]
  3. technology innovation program for improving efficiency of animal husbandry and developing natural green raising method in Hubei Province [2018skjcx05]

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This study conducted chromosome-level genome assembly of the Muscovy duck and comparative genomic analysis, revealing unique gene families in Muscovy duck compared to other bird species, with adaptive evolution signals in immune defence pathways. The results provide valuable resources for future molecular ecology studies and the evolutionary arms race between hosts and influenza viruses.
Background The Muscovy duck (Cairina moschata) is an economically important duck species, with favourable growth and carcass composition parameters in comparison to other ducks. However, limited genomic resources for Muscovy duck hinder our understanding of its evolution and genetic diversity. Results We combined linked-reads sequencing technology and reference-guided methods for de novo genome assembly. The final draft assembly was 1.12 Gbp with 29 autosomes, one sex chromosome and 4,583 unlocalized scaffolds with an N50 size of 77.35 Mb. Based on universal single-copy orthologues (BUSCO), the draft genome assembly completeness was estimated to be 93.30 %. Genome annotation identified 15,580 genes, with 15,537 (99.72 %) genes annotated in public databases. We conducted comparative genomic analyses and found that species-specific and rapidly expanding gene families (compared to other birds) in Muscovy duck are mainly involved in Calcium signaling, Adrenergic signaling in cardiomyocytes, and GnRH signaling pathways. In comparison to the common domestic duck (Anas platyrhynchos), we identified 104 genes exhibiting strong signals of adaptive evolution (Ka/Ks > 1). Most of these genes were associated with immune defence pathways (e.g. IFNAR1 and TLR5). This is indicative of the existence of differences in the immune responses between the two species. Additionally, we combined divergence and polymorphism data to demonstrate the faster-Z effect of chromosome evolution. Conclusions The chromosome-level genome assembly of Muscovy duck and comparative genomic analyses provide valuable resources for future molecular ecology studies, as well as the evolutionary arms race between the host and influenza viruses.

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