4.8 Article

Draft Assembly of the Symbiodinium minutum Nuclear Genome Reveals Dinoflagellate Gene Structure

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 15, Pages 1399-1408

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.05.062

Keywords

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Funding

  1. IT Section of OIST
  2. MEXT [23128515]
  3. JSPS of Japan [24241071]
  4. National Science Foundation [OCE-09-26822]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [221S0002, 23128515] Funding Source: KAKEN
  6. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [1402065] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Background: Dinoflagellates are known for their capacity to form harmful blooms (e.g., red tides) and as symbiotic, photosynthetic partners for corals. These unicellular eukary-otes have permanently condensed, liquid-crystalline chromosomes and immense nuclear genome sizes, often several times the size of the human genome. Here we describe the first draft assembly of a dinoflagellate nuclear genome, providing insights into its genome organization and gene inventory. Results: Sequencing reads from Symbiodinium minutum were assembled into 616 Mbp gene-rich DNA regions that represented roughly half of the estimated 1,500 Mbp genome of this species. The assembly encoded similar to 42,000 protein-coding genes, consistent with previous dinoflagellate gene number estimates using transcriptomic data. The Symbiodinium genome contains duplicated genes for regulator of chromosome condensation proteins, nearly one-third of which have eukaryotic orthologs, whereas the remainder have most likely been acquired through bacterial horizontal gene transfers. Symbiodinium genes are enriched in spliceosomal introns (mean = 18.6 introns/gene). Donor and acceptor splice sites are unique, with 5' sites utilizing not only GT but also GC and GA, whereas at 3' sites, a conserved G is present after AG. All spliceosomal snRNA genes (U1-U6) are clustered in the genome. Surprisingly, the Symbiodinium genome displays unidirectionally aligned genes throughout the genome, forming a cluster-like gene arrangement. Conclusions: We show here that a dinoflagellate genome exhibits unique and divergent characteristics when compared to those of other eukaryotes. Our data elucidate the organization and gene inventory of dinoflagellates and lay the foundation for future studies of this remarkable group of eukaryotes.

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