1. The tuatara genome: insights into vertebrate evolution from the sole survivor of an ancient reptilian order
- Author
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Chris L. Organ, David L. Adelson, Neil J. Gemmell, Konstantinos Billis, Daniel G. Mulcahy, Marco Mariotti, José Horacio Grau, Jaime Renart, Matthieu Muffato, David J. Winter, Thomas R. Buckley, Clive Stone, Lindsay Mickelson, Zhiqiang Wu, Paul Flicek, Fergal J. Martin, Stefan Prost, James M. Paterson, Lu Zeng, Pawel Michalak, Nicole Valenzuela, Bent O. Petersen, Melissa A. Wilson, Charles G. Barbieri, Vanessa L. González, Melissa D. Jordan, Hideaki Abe, José Ignacio Arroyo, Paul P. Gardner, Hilary E. Miller, Yuanyuan Cheng, Didac Santesmasses, Lin Kang, Nicola J. Nelson, Steven L. Salzberg, Roderic Guigó, Timothy A. Hore, Stephan Pabinger, R. Daniel Kortschak, Terry Bertozzi, Ngatiwai Trust Board, Kim Rutherford, Alexander Suh, Oliver A. Ryder, Richard D. Newcomb, Marc Tollis, Valentina Peona, Valeria Velásquez Zapata, Mateus Patricio, Nicolas Dussex, Shawn M. Rupp, Ryan K. Schott, Dustin P. DeMeo, Victoria G. Twort, J. Robert Macey, Joy M. Raison, Claire R. Peart, Vera Warmuth, Scott V. Edwards, and Helen R. Taylor
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0303 health sciences ,Tuatara ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Lineage (evolution) ,Vertebrate ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,DNA sequencing ,03 medical and health sciences ,Order (biology) ,Molecular evolution ,Evolutionary biology ,biology.animal ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), the only living member of the archaic reptilian order Rhynchocephalia (Sphenodontia) once widespread across Gondwana, is an iconic and enigmatic terrestrial vertebrate endemic to New Zealand. A key link to the now extinct stem reptiles from which dinosaurs, modern reptiles, birds and mammals evolved, the tuatara provides exclusive insights into the ancestral amniotes. The tuatara genome, at ∼5 Gbp, is among the largest vertebrate genomes assembled. Analysis of this genome and comparisons to other vertebrates reinforces the uniqueness of the tuatara. Phylogenetic analyses indicate tuatara diverged from the snakes and lizards ∼250 MYA. This lineage also shows moderate rates of molecular evolution, with instances of punctuated evolution. Genome sequence analysis identifies expansions of protein, non-protein-coding RNA families, and repeat elements, the latter of which show an extraordinary amalgam of reptilian and mammalian features. Sequencing of this genome provides a valuable resource for deep comparative analyses of tetrapods, as well as for tuatara biology and conservation. It also provides important insights into both the technical challenges and the cultural obligations associated with genome sequencing.
- Published
- 2019
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