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Whole snake genomes from eighteen families of snakes (Serpentes: Caenophidia) and their applications to systematics.

Authors :
Roberts, Jackson R
Bernstein, Justin M
Austin, Christopher C
Hains, Taylor
Mata, Joshua
Kieras, Michael
Pirro, Stacy
Ruane, Sara
Source :
Journal of Heredity. Sep2024, Vol. 115 Issue 5, p487-497. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present genome assemblies for 18 snake species representing 18 families (Serpentes: Caenophidia): Acrochordus granulatus , Aparallactus werneri , Boaedon fuliginosus , Calamaria suluensis , Cerberus rynchops , Grayia smithii , Imantodes cenchoa , Mimophis mahfalensis , Oxyrhabdium leporinum , Pareas carinatus , Psammodynastes pulverulentus , Pseudoxenodon macrops , Pseudoxyrhopus heterurus , Sibynophis collaris , Stegonotus admiraltiensis , Toxicocalamus goodenoughensis , Trimeresurus albolabris , and Tropidonophis doriae. From these new genome assemblies, we extracted thousands of loci commonly used in systematic and phylogenomic studies on snakes, including target-capture datasets composed of ultraconserved elements (UCEs) and anchored hybrid enriched loci (AHEs), as well as traditional Sanger loci. Phylogenies inferred from the two target-capture loci datasets were identical with each other and strongly congruent with previously published snake phylogenies. To show the additional utility of these non-model genomes for investigative evolutionary research, we mined the genome assemblies of two New Guinea island endemics in our dataset (S. admiraltiensis and T. doriae) for the ATP1a3 gene, a thoroughly researched indicator of resistance to toad toxin ingestion by squamates. We find that both these snakes possess the genotype for toad toxin resistance despite their endemism to New Guinea, a region absent of any toads until the human-mediated introduction of Cane Toads in the 1930s. These species possess identical substitutions that suggest the same bufotoxin resistance as their Australian congenerics (Stegonotus australis and Tropidonophis mairii) which forage on invasive Cane Toads. Herein, we show the utility of short-read high-coverage genomes, as well as improving the deficit of available squamate genomes with associated voucher specimens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221503
Volume :
115
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Heredity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179110854
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esae026