Diversity (Dec 2021)

Chromosomal-Level Assembly of Antarctic Scaly Rockcod, <i>Trematomus loennbergii</i> Genome Using Long-Read Sequencing and Chromosome Conformation Capture (Hi-C) Technologies

  • Euna Jo,
  • Seung Jae Lee,
  • Jeong-Hoon Kim,
  • Steven J. Parker,
  • Eunkyung Choi,
  • Jinmu Kim,
  • So-Ra Han,
  • Tae-Jin Oh,
  • Hyun Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/d13120668
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. 668

Abstract

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Trematomus species (suborder Notothenioidei; family Nototheniidae) are widely distributed in the southern oceans near Antarctica. There are 11 recognized species in the genus Trematomus, and notothenioids are known to have high chromosomal diversity (2n = 24–58) because of relatively recent and rapid adaptive radiation. Herein, we report the chromosomal-level genome assembly of T. loennbergii, the first characterized genome representative of the genus Trematomus. The final genome assembly of T. loennbergii was obtained using a Pacific Biosciences long-read sequencing platform and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture technology. Twenty-three chromosomal-level scaffolds were assembled to 940 Mb in total size, with a longest contig size of 48.5 Mb and contig N50 length of 24.7 Mb. The genome contained 42.03% repeat sequences, and a total of 24,525 protein-coding genes were annotated. We produced a high-quality genome assembly of T. loennbergii. Our results provide a first reference genome for the genus Trematomus and will serve as a basis for studying the molecular taxonomy and evolution of Antarctic fish.

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