4.5 Article

Ancestral Physical Stress and Later Immune Gene Family Expansions Shaped Bivalve Mollusc Evolution

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evab177

Keywords

bivalve; mollusc; orthology; evolution

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BBS/E/D/10002070, BBS/E/D/30002275, BBS/E/D/10002071]
  2. Wellcome Trust [206194, 218328]

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Bivalve molluscs, with 20,000 species globally, are crucial for ecosystem engineering and food security, yet little is known about their evolutionary adaptation strategies. Recent advances in long-read sequencing have allowed for accurate genome assemblies and revealed expansions in gene families across bivalve genomes as a response to evolutionary pressures.
Bivalve molluscs comprise 20,000 species occupying a wide diversity of marine habitats. As filter feeders and detritivores they act as ecosystem engineers clarifying water, creating reefs, and protecting coastlines. The global decline of natural oyster reefs has led to increased restoration efforts in recent years. Bivalves also play an important role in global food security contributing to >20% of worldwide aquaculture production. Despite this importance, relatively little is known about bivalve evolutionary adaptation strategies. Difficulties previously associated with highly heterozygous and repetitive regions of bivalve genomes have been overcome by long-read sequencing, enabling the generation of accurate bivalve assemblies. With these resources we have analyzed the genomes of 32 species representing each molluscan class, including 15 bivalve species, to identify gene families that have undergone expansion during bivalve evolution. Gene family expansions across bivalve genomes occur at the point of evolutionary pressures. We uncovered two key factors that shape bivalve evolutionary history: expansion of bivalvia into environmental niches with high stress followed by later exposure to specific pathogenic pressures. The conserved expansion of protein recycling gene families we found across bivalvia is mirrored by adaptations to a sedentary lifestyle seen in plants. These results reflect the ability of bivalves to tolerate high levels of environmental stress and constant exposure to pathogens as filter feeders. The increasing availability of accurate genome assemblies will provide greater resolution to these analyses allowing further points of evolutionary pressure to become clear in other understudied taxa and potentially different populations of a single species.

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