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High tandem repeat content in the genome of the short-lived annual fish Nothobranchius furzeri: a new vertebrate model for aging research

Authors :
Gernot Glöckner
Chris Lauber
Karol Szafranski
Kathrin Reichwald
Susanne Schories
Alessandro Cellerino
Ulrike Gausmann
Christoph Englert
Nils Hartmann
Stefan Taudien
Indrajit Nanda
Michael Schmid
Jeanette Kirschner
Manfred Schartl
Matthias Platzer
Markus Schilhabel
Reichwald, K
Lauber, C
Nanda, I
Kirschner, J
Hartmann, N
Schories, S
Gausmann, U
Taudien, S
Schilhabel, Mb
Szafranski, K
Glockner, G
Schmid, M
Cellerino, Alessandro
Schartl, M
Englert, C
Platzer, M.
Source :
Genome Biology, Genome biology, 10: R16
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2009.

Abstract

A genomic analysis of the annual fish Nothobranchius furzeri, a vertebrate with the shortest known life span in captivity and which may provide a new model organism for aging research.<br />Background The annual fish Nothobranchius furzeri is the vertebrate with the shortest known life span in captivity. Fish of the GRZ strain live only three to four months under optimal laboratory conditions, show explosive growth, early sexual maturation and age-dependent physiological and behavioral decline, and express aging related biomarkers. Treatment with resveratrol and low temperature significantly extends the maximum life span. These features make N. furzeri a promising new vertebrate model for age research. Results To contribute to establishing N. furzeri as a new model organism, we provide a first insight into its genome and a comparison to medaka, stickleback, tetraodon and zebrafish. The N. furzeri genome contains 19 chromosomes (2n = 38). Its genome of between 1.6 and 1.9 Gb is the largest among the analyzed fish species and has, at 45%, the highest repeat content. Remarkably, tandem repeats comprise 21%, which is 4-12 times more than in the other four fish species. In addition, G+C-rich tandem repeats preferentially localize to centromeric regions. Phylogenetic analysis based on coding sequences identifies medaka as the closest relative. Genotyping of an initial set of 27 markers and multi-locus fingerprinting of one microsatellite provides the first molecular evidence that the GRZ strain is highly inbred. Conclusions Our work presents a first basis for systematic genomic and genetic analyses aimed at understanding the mechanisms of life span determination in N. furzeri.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14656914 and 14656906
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bf43153440d37f7b72aac8ea57508ff