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Long-read HiFi sequencing correctly assembles repetitive heavy fibroin silk genes in new moth and caddisfly genomes

Insect silk is a versatile biomaterial. Lepidoptera and Trichoptera display some of the most diverse uses of silk, with varying strength, adhesive qualities, and elastic properties. Silk fibroin genes are long (>20 Kbp), with many repetitive motifs that make them challenging to sequence. Most res...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kawahara, Akito Y., Storer, Caroline G., Markee, Amanda, Heckenhauer, Jacqueline, Powell, Ashlyn, Plotkin, David, Hotaling, Scott, Cleland, Timothy P., Dikow, Rebecca B., Dikow, Torsten, Kuranishi, Ryoichi B., Messcher, Rebeccah, Pauls, Steffen U., Stewart, Russell J., Tojo, Koji, Frandsen, Paul B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: GigaScience Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9693786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36824508
http://dx.doi.org/10.46471/gigabyte.64
Descripción
Sumario:Insect silk is a versatile biomaterial. Lepidoptera and Trichoptera display some of the most diverse uses of silk, with varying strength, adhesive qualities, and elastic properties. Silk fibroin genes are long (>20 Kbp), with many repetitive motifs that make them challenging to sequence. Most research thus far has focused on conserved N- and C-terminal regions of fibroin genes because a full comparison of repetitive regions across taxa has not been possible. Using the PacBio Sequel II system and SMRT sequencing, we generated high fidelity (HiFi) long-read genomic and transcriptomic sequences for the Indianmeal moth (Plodia interpunctella) and genomic sequences for the caddisfly Eubasilissa regina. Both genomes were highly contiguous (N50  = 9.7 Mbp/32.4 Mbp, L50  = 13/11) and complete (BUSCO complete  = 99.3%/95.2%), with complete and contiguous recovery of silk heavy fibroin gene sequences. We show that HiFi long-read sequencing is helpful for understanding genes with long, repetitive regions.