The draft genome of Ruditapes philippinarum (the Manila clam), a promising model system for mitochondrial biology

Department of Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Theodosius Dobzhansky Centre for Genome Bioinformatics, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia
SeqOnce Biosciences Inc., Pasadena, California, United States of America
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Department of Biological Sciences, Program in Molecular and Computational Biology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.3096v1
Subject Areas
Aquaculture, Fisheries and Fish Science, Evolutionary Studies, Genomics, Marine Biology, Zoology
Keywords
Illumina, PacBio, de novo assembly, Doubly Uniparental Inheritance, bivalve, invertebrate genomics
Copyright
© 2017 Ghiselli et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ Preprints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Ghiselli F, Komissarov A, Milani L, Dunham JP, Breton S, Nuzhdin SV, Passamonti M. 2017. The draft genome of Ruditapes philippinarum (the Manila clam), a promising model system for mitochondrial biology. PeerJ Preprints 5:e3096v1

Abstract

The Class Bivalvia is a highly successful and ancient group including 20,000+ known species. They represent a good model for studying adaptation (anoxia/hypoxia, salinity, temperature, ...), and they are useful bioindicators for monitoring the concentration of pollutants in the water. They also make up an important source of food all over the world, with a production corresponding to ~20% of the global aquaculture yield. A striking feature of bivalves is the presence of an unusual mitochondrial inheritance system: the Doubly Uniparental Inheritance (DUI), so far detected in ~100 bivalve species. In DUI species, two mitochondrial genomes (mtDNAs) are present: one is transmitted through eggs (F-type), the other through sperm (M-type); the amino acid p-distance between conspecific M and F genomes ranges from 10% to over 50%. DUI provides a unique point of view for studying mitochondrial biology. In DUI systems: i) males are naturally heteroplasmic, with very divergent mtDNAs; ii) it is possible to study mitochondrial inheritance and bottleneck by following germ line mitochondria during development; iii) mitochondria are under selection for male functions. Here we present the draft genome of the DUI species Ruditapes philippinarum (the Manila clam). DNA from a male individual was sequenced with 40x Illumina HiSeq and 30x PacBio RSII. The best de novo assembly was obtained with Canu assembler, with contig N50=76kb (86% complete, 5% fragmented, and 9% missing metazoan orthologs according to BUSCO). Here we report the results of the first analyses and the technical challenges we faced, especially with the de novo assembly.

Author Comment

Poster presentation for the Open Symposium of SMBE 2017.