The First Genome-Wide Survey of Shortbelly Eel (Dysomma anguillare Barnard, 1923) to Provide Genomic Characteristics, Microsatellite Markers and Complete Mitogenome Information

Biochem Genet. 2023 Oct 31. doi: 10.1007/s10528-023-10543-1. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Dysomma anguillare is a demersal eel widespread distributing in tropical waters of the Indo-West Pacific and Atlantic. As an important component of the coastal fishery and marine ecosystem, the lack of genomic information for this species severely restricts the progress of relevant researches. In this study, the abecedarian genome-wide characteristics and phylogenetic relationships analyses were carried out based on next-generation sequencing (NGS) platform. The revised genome size was approximately 1 310 Mb, with the largest scaffold length reaching 23 878 bp through K-mer (K = 17) method. The heterozygosity, repetitive rate and average GC content were about 0.94%, 51.93% and 42.23%, respectively. A total of 1 160 104 microsatellite motifs were identified from the de novo assembled genome of D. anguillare, in which dinucleotide repeats accounted for the largest proportion (592 234, 51.05%), the highest occurrence frequency (14.58%) as well as the largest relative abundance (379.27/Mb). The high-polymorphic and moderate-polymorphic loci composed around 73% of the total single sequence repeats (SSRs), showing a latent capacity for subsequent population genetic structure and genetic diversity appraisal researches. Another byproduct of whole-genome sequencing, the double-stranded and circular mitogenome (16 690 bp) was assembled to investigate the evolutionary relationships of D. anguillare. The phylogenic tree constructed with maximum likelihood (ML) method showed that D. anguillare was closely related to Synaphobranchidae species, and the molecular systematic results further supported classical taxonomy status of D. anguillare.

Keywords: Dysomma anguillare; Genome survey sequencing; Microsatellites; Mitochondrial genome; Phylogenetic relationships.