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Full-Text Articles in Genetics and Genomics

The Interplay Of Tlr9, Myeloid Cells, And A20 In Periodontal Inflammation, Katie E. Crump, Jennifer C. Oakley, Xia Xia-Juan, Theandra C. Madu, Swathi Devaki, Erin C. Mooney, Sinem E. Sahingur Nov 2016

The Interplay Of Tlr9, Myeloid Cells, And A20 In Periodontal Inflammation, Katie E. Crump, Jennifer C. Oakley, Xia Xia-Juan, Theandra C. Madu, Swathi Devaki, Erin C. Mooney, Sinem E. Sahingur

Biology Faculty Articles

TLR9 deficient (TLR9-/-) mice are resistant to periodontitis, a disease characterized by a dysbiotic microbiota and deregulated immune response resulting in tooth loss and various systemic conditions. However, the mechanisms and biological pathways by which TLR9 instigates periodontal inflammation are yet to be identified. In a ligature-induced model of periodontitis, we demonstrate TLR9-/- mice exhibited significantly less alveolar bone loss compared to their wild-type (WT) counterparts. Consistent with the disease phenotype, gingival tissues showed significantly more inflammatory cell infiltrate in the WT ligated but not in the TLR9-/- ligated mice compared to their unligated controls. Peritoneal …


Whole-Genome Identification, Phylogeny, And Evolution Of The Cytochrome P450 Family 2 (Cyp2) Subfamilies In Birds, Daniela Almeida, Emanuel Maldonado, Imran Khan, Liliana Silva, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Guojie Zhang, Erich D. Jarvis, Stephen J. O'Brien, Warren E. Johnson, Agostinho Antunes Nov 2016

Whole-Genome Identification, Phylogeny, And Evolution Of The Cytochrome P450 Family 2 (Cyp2) Subfamilies In Birds, Daniela Almeida, Emanuel Maldonado, Imran Khan, Liliana Silva, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Guojie Zhang, Erich D. Jarvis, Stephen J. O'Brien, Warren E. Johnson, Agostinho Antunes

Biology Faculty Articles

The cytochrome P450 (CYP) superfamily defends organisms from endogenous and noxious environmental compounds, and thus is crucial for survival. However, beyond mammals the molecular evolution of CYP2 subfamilies is poorly understood. Here, we characterized the CYP2 family across 48 avian whole genomes representing all major extant bird clades. Overall,12 CYP2 subfamilies were identified, including the first description of the CYP2F, CYP2G, and several CYP2AF genes in avian genomes. Some of the CYP2 genes previously described as being lineage-specific, such as CYP2K and CYP2W, are ubiquitous to all avian groups. Furthermore, we identified a large number of CYP2J copies, which have …


Koalas (Phascolarctos Cinereus) From Queensland Are Genetically Distinct From 2 Populations In Victoria, Christina T. Ruiz-Rodriguez, Yasuko Ishida, Neil D. Murray, Stephen J. O'Brien, Jennifer A.M. Graves, Alex D. Greenwood, Alfred L. Roca Nov 2016

Koalas (Phascolarctos Cinereus) From Queensland Are Genetically Distinct From 2 Populations In Victoria, Christina T. Ruiz-Rodriguez, Yasuko Ishida, Neil D. Murray, Stephen J. O'Brien, Jennifer A.M. Graves, Alex D. Greenwood, Alfred L. Roca

Biology Faculty Articles

The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) suffered population declines and local extirpation due to hunting in the early 20th century, especially in southern Australia. Koalas were subsequently reintroduced to the Brisbane Ranges (BR) and Stony Rises (SR) by translocating individuals from a population on French Island descended from a small number of founders. To examine genetic diversity and north-south differentiation, we genotyped 13 microsatellite markers in 46 wild koalas from the BR and SR, and 27 Queensland koalas kept at the US zoos. The Queensland koalas displayed much higher heterozygosity (H O = 0.73) than the 2 southern Australian koala populations examined: …


Comparison Of Carnivore, Omnivore, And Herbivore Mammalian Genomes With A New Leopard Assembly, Soonok Kim, Yun Sung Cho, Hak Min Kim, Oksung Chung, Hyunho Kim, Sungwoong Jho, Hong Seomun, Jeongho Kim, Woo Young Bang, Changmu Kim, Junghwa An, Chang Hwan Bae, Youngjune Bhak, Sungwon Jeon, Hyejun Yoon, Yumi Kim, Je Hoon Jun, Hye Jin Lee, Suan Cho, Olga Uphyrkina, Aleksey Kostyria, John Goodrich, Dale Miquelle, Melody Roelke, John Lewis, Andrey Yurchenko, Anton Bankevich, Juok Cho, Semin Lee Oct 2016

Comparison Of Carnivore, Omnivore, And Herbivore Mammalian Genomes With A New Leopard Assembly, Soonok Kim, Yun Sung Cho, Hak Min Kim, Oksung Chung, Hyunho Kim, Sungwoong Jho, Hong Seomun, Jeongho Kim, Woo Young Bang, Changmu Kim, Junghwa An, Chang Hwan Bae, Youngjune Bhak, Sungwon Jeon, Hyejun Yoon, Yumi Kim, Je Hoon Jun, Hye Jin Lee, Suan Cho, Olga Uphyrkina, Aleksey Kostyria, John Goodrich, Dale Miquelle, Melody Roelke, John Lewis, Andrey Yurchenko, Anton Bankevich, Juok Cho, Semin Lee

Biology Faculty Articles

Background: There are three main dietary groups in mammals: carnivores, omnivores, and herbivores. Currently, there is limited comparative genomics insight into the evolution of dietary specializations in mammals. Due to recent advances in sequencing technologies, we were able to perform in-depth whole genome analyses of representatives of these three dietary groups. Results: We investigated the evolution of carnivory by comparing 18 representative genomes from across Mammalia with carnivorous, omnivorous, and herbivorous dietary specializations, focusing on Felidae (domestic cat, tiger, lion, cheetah, and leopard), Hominidae, and Bovidae genomes. We generated a new high-quality leopard genome assembly, as well as two wild …


Pangolin Genomes And The Evolution Of Mammalian Scales And Immunity, Siew Who Choo, Mike Rayko, Tze King Tan, Ranjeev Hari, Aleksey Komissarov, Wei Yee Wee, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Sergey Kliver, Gaik Tamazian, Agostinho Antunes, Richard K. Wilson, Wesley C. Warren, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Patrick Minx, Ksenia Krasheninnikova, Antoinette Kotze, Desire L. Dalton, Elaine Vermaak, Ian C. Paterson, Pavel Dobrynin, Frankie Thomas Sitam, Jeffrine J. Rovie-Ryan, Warren E. Johnson, Aini Mohamed Yusoff, Shu Jin Luo, Kayal Vizi Karuppannan, Gang Fang, Deyou Zheng, Mark B. Gerstein Oct 2016

Pangolin Genomes And The Evolution Of Mammalian Scales And Immunity, Siew Who Choo, Mike Rayko, Tze King Tan, Ranjeev Hari, Aleksey Komissarov, Wei Yee Wee, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Sergey Kliver, Gaik Tamazian, Agostinho Antunes, Richard K. Wilson, Wesley C. Warren, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Patrick Minx, Ksenia Krasheninnikova, Antoinette Kotze, Desire L. Dalton, Elaine Vermaak, Ian C. Paterson, Pavel Dobrynin, Frankie Thomas Sitam, Jeffrine J. Rovie-Ryan, Warren E. Johnson, Aini Mohamed Yusoff, Shu Jin Luo, Kayal Vizi Karuppannan, Gang Fang, Deyou Zheng, Mark B. Gerstein

Biology Faculty Articles

Pangolins, unique mammals with scales over most of their body, no teeth, poor vision, and an acute olfactory system, comprise the only placental order (Pholidota) without a whole-genome map. To investigate pangolin biology and evolution, we developed genome assemblies of the Malayan (Manis javanica) and Chinese (M. pentadactyla) pangolins. Strikingly, we found that interferon epsilon (IFNE), exclusively expressed in epithelial cells and important in skin and mucosal immunity, is pseudogenized in all African and Asian pangolin species that we examined, perhaps impacting resistance to infection. We propose that scale development was an innovation that provided protection against injuries or stress …


De Novo Sequencing, Assembly And Analysis Of Eight Different Transcriptomes From The Malayan Pangolin, Aini Mohamed Yusoff, Tze King Tan, Ranjeev Hari, Klaus-Peter Koepfli, Wei Yee Wee, Agostinho Antunes, Frankie Thomas Sitam, Jeffrine Japning Rovie-Ryan, Kayal Vizi Karuppannan, Guat Jah Wong, Leonard Lipovich, Wesley C. Warren, Stephen J. O'Brien, Siew Woh Choo Sep 2016

De Novo Sequencing, Assembly And Analysis Of Eight Different Transcriptomes From The Malayan Pangolin, Aini Mohamed Yusoff, Tze King Tan, Ranjeev Hari, Klaus-Peter Koepfli, Wei Yee Wee, Agostinho Antunes, Frankie Thomas Sitam, Jeffrine Japning Rovie-Ryan, Kayal Vizi Karuppannan, Guat Jah Wong, Leonard Lipovich, Wesley C. Warren, Stephen J. O'Brien, Siew Woh Choo

Biology Faculty Articles

Pangolins are scale-covered mammals, containing eight endangered species. Maintaining pangolins in captivity is a significant challenge, in part because little is known about their genetics. Here we provide the first large-scale sequencing of the critically endangered Manis javanica transcriptomes from eight different organs using Illumina HiSeq technology, yielding ~75 Giga bases and 89,754 unigenes. We found some unigenes involved in the insect hormone biosynthesis pathway and also 747 lipids metabolism-related unigenes that may be insightful to understand the lipid metabolism system in pangolins. Comparative analysis between M. javanica and other mammals revealed many pangolin-specific genes significantly over-represented in stress-related processes, …


Positive Selection Linked With Generation Of Novel Mammalian Dentition Patterns, Joao P. Machado, Siby Philip, Emanuel Maldonado, Stephen J. O'Brien, Warren E. Johnson Sep 2016

Positive Selection Linked With Generation Of Novel Mammalian Dentition Patterns, Joao P. Machado, Siby Philip, Emanuel Maldonado, Stephen J. O'Brien, Warren E. Johnson

Biology Faculty Articles

A diverse group of genes are involved in the tooth development of mammals. Several studies, focused mainly on mice and rats, have provided a detailed depiction of the processes coordinating tooth formation and shape. Here we surveyed 236 tooth-associated genes in 39 mammalian genomes and tested for signatures of selection to assess patterns of molecular adaptation in genes regulating mammalian dentition. Of the 236 genes, 31 (∼13.1%) showed strong signatures of positive selection that may be responsible for the phenotypic diversity observed in mammalian dentition. Mammalian-specific tooth-associated genes had accelerated mutation rates compared with older genes found across all vertebrates. …


The Genome-Wide Analysis Of Carcinoembryonic Antigen Signaling By Colorectal Cancer Cells Using Rna Sequencing, Olga Bajenova, Anna Gorbunova, Igor Evsyukov, Michael Rayko, Svetlana Gapon, Ekaterina Bozhokina, Alexander Shishkin, Stephen J. O'Brien Sep 2016

The Genome-Wide Analysis Of Carcinoembryonic Antigen Signaling By Colorectal Cancer Cells Using Rna Sequencing, Olga Bajenova, Anna Gorbunova, Igor Evsyukov, Michael Rayko, Svetlana Gapon, Ekaterina Bozhokina, Alexander Shishkin, Stephen J. O'Brien

Biology Faculty Articles

Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA, CEACAM5, CD66) is a promoter of metastasis in epithelial cancers that is widely used as a prognostic clinical marker of metastasis. The aim of this study is to identify the network of genes that are associated with CEA-induced colorectal cancer liver metastasis. We compared the genome-wide transcriptomic profiles of CEA positive (MIP101 clone 8) and CEA negative (MIP 101) colorectal cancer cell lines with different metastatic potential in vivo. The CEA-producing cells displayed quantitative changes in the level of expression for 100 genes (over-expressed or down-regulated). They were confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR. The KEGG pathway analysis identified …


Chromosomer: A Reference-Based Genome Arrangement Tool For Producing Draft Chromosome Sequences, Gaik Tamazian, Pavel Dobrynin, Ksenia Krasheninnikova, Aleksey Komissarov, Klaus-Peter Koepfli, Stephen J. O'Brien Aug 2016

Chromosomer: A Reference-Based Genome Arrangement Tool For Producing Draft Chromosome Sequences, Gaik Tamazian, Pavel Dobrynin, Ksenia Krasheninnikova, Aleksey Komissarov, Klaus-Peter Koepfli, Stephen J. O'Brien

Biology Faculty Articles

Background: As the number of sequenced genomes rapidly increases, chromosome assembly is becoming an even more crucial step of any genome study. Since de novo chromosome assemblies are confounded by repeat-mediated artifacts, reference-assisted assemblies that use comparative inference have become widely used, prompting the development of several reference-assisted assembly programs for prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes.

Findings: We developed Chromosomer – a reference-based genome arrangement tool, which rapidly builds chromosomes from genome contigs or scaffolds using their alignments to a reference genome of a closely related species. Chromosomer does not require mate-pair libraries and it offers a number of auxiliary tools …


Contrasting Origin Of B Chromosomes In Two Cervids (Siberian Roe Deer And Grey Brocket Deer) Unravelled By Chromosome-Specific Dna Sequencing, Alexey I. Makunin, Ilya G. Kichigin, Denis M. Larkin, Patricia C. M. O'Brien, Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith, Fengtang Yang, Anastasiya A. Proskuryakova, Nadezhda V. Vorobieva, Ekaterina N. Chernyaeva, Stephen J. O'Brien, Alexander S. Graphodatsky, Vladimir Trifonov Aug 2016

Contrasting Origin Of B Chromosomes In Two Cervids (Siberian Roe Deer And Grey Brocket Deer) Unravelled By Chromosome-Specific Dna Sequencing, Alexey I. Makunin, Ilya G. Kichigin, Denis M. Larkin, Patricia C. M. O'Brien, Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith, Fengtang Yang, Anastasiya A. Proskuryakova, Nadezhda V. Vorobieva, Ekaterina N. Chernyaeva, Stephen J. O'Brien, Alexander S. Graphodatsky, Vladimir Trifonov

Biology Faculty Articles

Background

B chromosomes are dispensable and variable karyotypic elements found in some species of animals, plants and fungi. They often originate from duplications and translocations of host genomic regions or result from hybridization. In most species, little is known about their DNA content. Here we perform high-throughput sequencing and analysis of B chromosomes of roe deer and brocket deer, the only representatives of Cetartiodactyla known to have B chromosomes.

Results

In this study we developed an approach to identify genomic regions present on chromosomes by high-throughput sequencing of DNA generated from flow-sorted chromosomes using degenerate-oligonucleotide-primed PCR. Application of this method …


Diversity, Structure And Convergent Evolution Of The Global Sponge Microbiome, Torsten Thomas, Lucas Moitinho-Silva, Miguel Lurgi, Johannes R. Bjork, Cole Easson, Carmen Astudillo-Garcia, Julie B. Olson, Patrick M. Erwin, Susanna Lopez-Legentil, Heidi Luter, Andia Chaves Fonnegra, Rodrigo Costa, Peter J. Schupp, Laura Steindler, Dirk Erpenbeck, Jack Gilbert, Rob Knight, Gail Ackermann, Jose V. Lopez, Michael W. Taylor, Robert W. Thacker, Jose M. Montoya, Ute Hentschel, Nicole S. Webster Jun 2016

Diversity, Structure And Convergent Evolution Of The Global Sponge Microbiome, Torsten Thomas, Lucas Moitinho-Silva, Miguel Lurgi, Johannes R. Bjork, Cole Easson, Carmen Astudillo-Garcia, Julie B. Olson, Patrick M. Erwin, Susanna Lopez-Legentil, Heidi Luter, Andia Chaves Fonnegra, Rodrigo Costa, Peter J. Schupp, Laura Steindler, Dirk Erpenbeck, Jack Gilbert, Rob Knight, Gail Ackermann, Jose V. Lopez, Michael W. Taylor, Robert W. Thacker, Jose M. Montoya, Ute Hentschel, Nicole S. Webster

Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Articles

Sponges (phylum Porifera) are early-diverging metazoa renowned for establishing complex microbial symbioses. Here we present a global Porifera microbiome survey, set out to establish the ecological and evolutionary drivers of these host–microbe interactions.We show that sponges are a reservoir of exceptional microbial diversity and major contributors to the total microbial diversity of the world’s oceans. Little commonality in species composition or structure is evident across the phylum, although symbiont communities are characterized by specialists and generalists rather than opportunists. Core sponge microbiomes are stable and characterized by generalist symbionts exhibiting amensal and/or commensal interactions. Symbionts that are phylogenetically unique to …


A High-Resolution Snp Array-Based Linkage Map Anchors A New Domestic Cat Draft Genome Assembly And Provides Detailed Patterns Of Recombination, Gang Li, Ladeana W. Hillier, Robert A. Grahn, Aleksey V. Zimin, Victor A. David, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, Rondo Middleton, Steven S. Hannah, Sher L. Hendrickson, Alexey Makunin, Stephen J. O'Brien, Patrick Minx, Richard K. Wilson, Leslie A. Lyons, Wesley C. Warren, William J. Murphy Jun 2016

A High-Resolution Snp Array-Based Linkage Map Anchors A New Domestic Cat Draft Genome Assembly And Provides Detailed Patterns Of Recombination, Gang Li, Ladeana W. Hillier, Robert A. Grahn, Aleksey V. Zimin, Victor A. David, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, Rondo Middleton, Steven S. Hannah, Sher L. Hendrickson, Alexey Makunin, Stephen J. O'Brien, Patrick Minx, Richard K. Wilson, Leslie A. Lyons, Wesley C. Warren, William J. Murphy

Biology Faculty Articles

High-resolution genetic and physical maps are invaluable tools for building accurate genome assemblies, and interpreting results of genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Previous genetic and physical maps anchored good quality draft assemblies of the domestic cat genome, enabling the discovery of numerous genes underlying hereditary disease and phenotypes of interest to the biomedical science and breeding communities. However, these maps lacked sufficient marker density to order thousands of shorter scaffolds in earlier assemblies, which instead relied heavily on comparative mapping with related species. A high-resolution map would aid in validating and ordering chromosome scaffolds from existing and new genome assemblies. Here, …


Characterization Of The Marine Sponge Amphimedon Compressa Microbiome Across A Spatial Gradient, Renee Michelle Potens May 2016

Characterization Of The Marine Sponge Amphimedon Compressa Microbiome Across A Spatial Gradient, Renee Michelle Potens

HCNSO Student Theses and Dissertations

Diverse and ecologically important microbial communities (microbiomes) are symbiotic within marine sponges. In this study, the microbiome of Amphimedon compressa from three sample locations (Broward and Dade Counties, Southeast Florida, USA and the Southern Caribbean, Bocas del Toro, Panama) is characterized using 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing. The predominant taxa are Proteobacteria and Cyanobacteria, as expected for Low Microbial Abundance sponges, accounting for over 53% of the total microbiome community. The numbers of Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) decrease from Broward County (2,900) to Dade County (2,300) and then Bocas del Toro (1,200). The correlates to a decreasing north-south gradient of …


Bone-Associated Gene Evolution And The Origin Of Flight In Birds, Joao P. Machado, Warren E. Johnson, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Guojie Zhang, Erich D. Jarvis, Stephen J. O'Brien, Agostinho Antunes May 2016

Bone-Associated Gene Evolution And The Origin Of Flight In Birds, Joao P. Machado, Warren E. Johnson, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Guojie Zhang, Erich D. Jarvis, Stephen J. O'Brien, Agostinho Antunes

Biology Faculty Articles

Background

Bones have been subjected to considerable selective pressure throughout vertebrate evolution, such as occurred during the adaptations associated with the development of powered flight. Powered flight evolved independently in two extant clades of vertebrates, birds and bats. While this trait provided advantages such as in aerial foraging habits, escape from predators or long-distance travels, it also imposed great challenges, namely in the bone structure.

Results

We performed comparative genomic analyses of 89 bone-associated genes from 47 avian genomes (including 45 new), 39 mammalian, and 20 reptilian genomes, and demonstrate that birds, after correcting for multiple testing, have an almost …


Successful Enrichment And Recovery Of Whole Mitochondrial Genomes From Ancient Human Dental Calculus, Andrew T. Ozga, Maria A. Nieves-Colon, Tanvi P. Honap, Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan, Courtney A. Hofman, George R. Milner, Cecil M. Lewis Jr., Anne C. Stone, Christina Warinner May 2016

Successful Enrichment And Recovery Of Whole Mitochondrial Genomes From Ancient Human Dental Calculus, Andrew T. Ozga, Maria A. Nieves-Colon, Tanvi P. Honap, Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan, Courtney A. Hofman, George R. Milner, Cecil M. Lewis Jr., Anne C. Stone, Christina Warinner

Biology Faculty Articles

Objectives

Archaeological dental calculus is a rich source of host‐associated biomolecules. Importantly, however, dental calculus is more accurately described as a calcified microbial biofilm than a host tissue. As such, concerns regarding destructive analysis of human remains may not apply as strongly to dental calculus, opening the possibility of obtaining human health and ancestry information from dental calculus in cases where destructive analysis of conventional skeletal remains is not permitted. Here we investigate the preservation of human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in archaeological dental calculus and its potential for full mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) reconstruction in maternal lineage ancestry analysis.

Materials and …


A Mutation In Ltbp2 Causes Congenital Glaucoma In Domestic Cats (Felis Catus), Markus H. Kuehn, Koren A. Lipsett, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, S. Scott Whitmore, Todd E. Scheetz, Victor A. David, Stephen J. O'Brien, Zhongyuan Zhao, Jackie K. Jens, Elizabeth M. Snella, N. Matthew Ellinwood, Gillian J. Mclellan May 2016

A Mutation In Ltbp2 Causes Congenital Glaucoma In Domestic Cats (Felis Catus), Markus H. Kuehn, Koren A. Lipsett, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, S. Scott Whitmore, Todd E. Scheetz, Victor A. David, Stephen J. O'Brien, Zhongyuan Zhao, Jackie K. Jens, Elizabeth M. Snella, N. Matthew Ellinwood, Gillian J. Mclellan

Biology Faculty Articles

The glaucomas are a group of diseases characterized by optic nerve damage that together represent a leading cause of blindness in the human population and in domestic animals. Here we report a mutation in LTBP2 that causes primary congenital glaucoma (PCG) in domestic cats. We identified a spontaneous form of PCG in cats and established a breeding colony segregating for PCG consistent with fully penetrant, autosomal recessive inheritance of the trait. Elevated intraocular pressure, globe enlargement and elongated ciliary processes were consistently observed in all affected cats by 8 weeks of age. Varying degrees of optic nerve damage resulted by …


Response To Comment By Faurby, Werdelin And Svenning, Stephen J. O'Brien, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Eduardo Eizirik, Warren Johnson, Carlos Driscoll, Agostinho Antunes, Anne Schmidt-Kuntzel, Laurie Marker, Pavel Dobrynin May 2016

Response To Comment By Faurby, Werdelin And Svenning, Stephen J. O'Brien, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Eduardo Eizirik, Warren Johnson, Carlos Driscoll, Agostinho Antunes, Anne Schmidt-Kuntzel, Laurie Marker, Pavel Dobrynin

Biology Faculty Articles

No abstract provided.


Global Genetic Connectivity And Diversity In A Shark Of High Conservation Concern, The Oceanic Whitetip, Carcharhinus Longimanus, Cassandra L. Ruck Apr 2016

Global Genetic Connectivity And Diversity In A Shark Of High Conservation Concern, The Oceanic Whitetip, Carcharhinus Longimanus, Cassandra L. Ruck

HCNSO Student Theses and Dissertations

The oceanic whitetip shark, Carcharhinus longimanus, is a circumtropical pelagic shark of high conservation concern (IUCN Red List: “Critically Endangered” in the Western North and Western Central Atlantic and “Vulnerable” globally). I present the first, population genetic assessment of the oceanic whitetip shark on a global scale, based on analysis of two mitochondrial genome regions (entire 1066-1067 bp control region and 784 bp partial ND4 gene), and nine nuclear microsatellite loci. No population structure was detected within the Western Atlantic. However, highly significant population structure was detected between Western Atlantic and Indo-Pacific Ocean sharks across all markers. Additionally, a …


The Asian Arowana (Scleropages Formosus) Genome Provides New Insights Into The Evolution Of An Early Lineage Of Teleosts, Chao Bian, Yinchang Hu, Vydianathan Ravi, Inna S. Kuznetsova, Xueyan Shen, Xidong Mu, Ying Sun, Xinxin You, Jia Li, Xiaofeng Li, Ying Qiu, Boon-Hui Tay, Natascha May Thevasagayam, Aleksey S. Komissarov, Vladimir Trifonov, Marsel Kabilov, Alexey Tupikin, Jianren Luo, Yi Liu, Hongmei Song, Chao Liu, Xuejie Wang, Dangen Gu, Yexin Yang, Wujiao Li, Gianluca Polgar, Guangyi Fan, Peng Zeng, He Zhang, Zijun Xiong, Zhujing Tang, Chao Peng, Zhiqiang Ruan, Hui Yu, Jieming Chen, Mingjun Fan, Yu Huang, Min Wang, Xiaomeng Zhao, Guojun Hu, Huanming Yang, Jian Wang, Jun Wang, Xun Xu, Linsheng Song, Gangchun Xu, Junmin Xu, Stephen J. O'Brien, Laszlo Orban, Byrappa Venkatesh, Qiong Shi Apr 2016

The Asian Arowana (Scleropages Formosus) Genome Provides New Insights Into The Evolution Of An Early Lineage Of Teleosts, Chao Bian, Yinchang Hu, Vydianathan Ravi, Inna S. Kuznetsova, Xueyan Shen, Xidong Mu, Ying Sun, Xinxin You, Jia Li, Xiaofeng Li, Ying Qiu, Boon-Hui Tay, Natascha May Thevasagayam, Aleksey S. Komissarov, Vladimir Trifonov, Marsel Kabilov, Alexey Tupikin, Jianren Luo, Yi Liu, Hongmei Song, Chao Liu, Xuejie Wang, Dangen Gu, Yexin Yang, Wujiao Li, Gianluca Polgar, Guangyi Fan, Peng Zeng, He Zhang, Zijun Xiong, Zhujing Tang, Chao Peng, Zhiqiang Ruan, Hui Yu, Jieming Chen, Mingjun Fan, Yu Huang, Min Wang, Xiaomeng Zhao, Guojun Hu, Huanming Yang, Jian Wang, Jun Wang, Xun Xu, Linsheng Song, Gangchun Xu, Junmin Xu, Stephen J. O'Brien, Laszlo Orban, Byrappa Venkatesh, Qiong Shi

Biology Faculty Articles

The Asian arowana (Scleropages formosus), one of the world’s most expensive cultivated ornamental fishes, is an endangered species. It represents an ancient lineage of teleosts: the Osteoglossomorpha. Here, we provide a high-quality chromosome-level reference genome of a female golden-variety arowana using a combination of deep shotgun sequencing and high-resolution linkage mapping. In addition, we have also generated two draft genome assemblies for the red and green varieties. Phylogenomic analysis supports a sister group relationship between Osteoglossomorpha (bonytongues) and Elopomorpha (eels and relatives), with the two clades together forming a sister group of Clupeocephala which includes all the remaining …


A Tale Of Two Theories: Using An Engineered Strain Of E. Coli To Bridge The Gap Between Quorum Sensing And Diffusion Sensing, Cortney E. Wilson Apr 2016

A Tale Of Two Theories: Using An Engineered Strain Of E. Coli To Bridge The Gap Between Quorum Sensing And Diffusion Sensing, Cortney E. Wilson

HCNSO Student Theses and Dissertations

Cooperation is a trait that is found at all levels of biological organization. Interestingly, cooperation appears to occur in bacteria that produce small, easily diffusible molecules called autoinducers. To understand why bacteria produce these autoinducers, the scientific community has focused on one predominant theory called quorum sensing. Under this theory, bacteria produce autoinducers so they can sense the density of the population. Once a sufficiently high population density is reached, autoinducers initiate the production of a costly gene product that serves to benefit the population. In contrast, a competing theory called diffusion sensing suggests that autoinducers are used by the …


Chromosomal-Level Assembly Of The Asian Seabass Genome Using Long Sequence Reads And Multi-Layered Scaffolding, Shubha Vij, Heiner Kuhl, Inna S. Kuznetsova, Aleksey Komissarov, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Peter Van Heusden, Siddharth Singh, Natascha May Thevasagayam, Sai Rama Sridatta Prakki, Kathiresan Purushothaman, Jolly M. Saju, Junhui Jiang, Stanley Kimbung Mbandi, Mario Jonas, Amy Hin Yan Tong, Sarah Mwangi, Doreen Lau, Si Yan Ngoh, Woei Chang Liew, Xueyan Shen, Lawrence S. Hon, James P. Drake, Matthew Boitano, Richard Hall, Chen-Shan Chin, Ramkumar Lachumanan, Jonas Korlach, Vladimir Trifonov, Marsel Kabilov, Alexey Tupikin, Darrell Green, Simon Moxon, Tyler Garvin, Fritz J. Sedlazeck, Gregory W. Vurture, Gopikrishna Gopalapillai, Vinaya Kumar Katneni, Tansyn H. Noble, Vinod Scaria, Sridhar Sivasubbu, Dean R. Jerry, Stephen J. O'Brien, Michael C. Schatz, Tamas Dalmay, Stephen W. Turner, Si Lok, Alan Christoffels, Laszlo Orban Apr 2016

Chromosomal-Level Assembly Of The Asian Seabass Genome Using Long Sequence Reads And Multi-Layered Scaffolding, Shubha Vij, Heiner Kuhl, Inna S. Kuznetsova, Aleksey Komissarov, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Peter Van Heusden, Siddharth Singh, Natascha May Thevasagayam, Sai Rama Sridatta Prakki, Kathiresan Purushothaman, Jolly M. Saju, Junhui Jiang, Stanley Kimbung Mbandi, Mario Jonas, Amy Hin Yan Tong, Sarah Mwangi, Doreen Lau, Si Yan Ngoh, Woei Chang Liew, Xueyan Shen, Lawrence S. Hon, James P. Drake, Matthew Boitano, Richard Hall, Chen-Shan Chin, Ramkumar Lachumanan, Jonas Korlach, Vladimir Trifonov, Marsel Kabilov, Alexey Tupikin, Darrell Green, Simon Moxon, Tyler Garvin, Fritz J. Sedlazeck, Gregory W. Vurture, Gopikrishna Gopalapillai, Vinaya Kumar Katneni, Tansyn H. Noble, Vinod Scaria, Sridhar Sivasubbu, Dean R. Jerry, Stephen J. O'Brien, Michael C. Schatz, Tamas Dalmay, Stephen W. Turner, Si Lok, Alan Christoffels, Laszlo Orban

Biology Faculty Articles

We report here the ~670 Mb genome assembly of the Asian seabass (Lates calcarifer), a tropical marine teleost. We used long-read sequencing augmented by transcriptomics, optical and genetic mapping along with shared synteny from closely related fish species to derive a chromosome-level assembly with a contig N50 size over 1 Mb and scaffold N50 size over 25 Mb that span ~90% of the genome. The population structure of L. calcarifer species complex was analyzed by re-sequencing 61 individuals representing various regions across the species’ native range. SNP analyses identified high levels of genetic diversity and confirmed earlier indications …


The Population Origins And Expansion Of Feral Cats In Australia, Peter B.S. Spencer, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Victor A. David, Rachael Scott, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Carlos Driscoll, Stephen J. O'Brien, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond Mar 2016

The Population Origins And Expansion Of Feral Cats In Australia, Peter B.S. Spencer, Andrey A. Yurchenko, Victor A. David, Rachael Scott, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Carlos Driscoll, Stephen J. O'Brien, Marilyn Menotti-Raymond

Biology Faculty Articles

The historical literature suggests that in Australia, the domestic cat (Felis catus) had a European origin [~200 years before present (ybp)], but it is unclear if cats arrived from across the Asian land bridge contemporaneously with the dingo (4000 ybp), or perhaps immigrated ~40000 ybp in association with Aboriginal settlement from Asia. The origin of cats in Australia is important because the continent has a complex and ancient faunal assemblage that is dominated by endemic rodents and marsupials and lacks the large placental carnivores found on other large continents. Cats are now ubiquitous across the entire Australian continent and have …