Genes (Dec 2022)

The Satellite DNA Catalogues of Two Serrasalmidae (Teleostei, Characiformes): Conservation of General satDNA Features over 30 Million Years

  • Caio Augusto Gomes Goes,
  • Natalia dos Santos,
  • Pedro Henrique de Mira Rodrigues,
  • José Henrique Forte Stornioli,
  • Amanda Bueno da Silva,
  • Rodrigo Zeni dos Santos,
  • Jhon Alex Dziechciarz Vidal,
  • Duílio Mazzoni Zerbinato de Andrade Silva,
  • Roberto Ferreira Artoni,
  • Fausto Foresti,
  • Diogo Teruo Hashimoto,
  • Fábio Porto-Foresti,
  • Ricardo Utsunomia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14010091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 91

Abstract

Read online

Satellite DNAs (satDNAs) are tandemly repeated sequences that are usually located on the heterochromatin, and the entire collection of satDNAs within a genome is called satellitome. Primarily, these sequences are not under selective pressure and evolve by concerted evolution, resulting in elevated rates of divergence between the satDNA profiles of reproductive isolated species/populations. Here, we characterized two additional satellitomes of Characiformes fish (Colossoma macropomum and Piaractus mesopotamicus) that diverged approximately 30 million years ago, while still retaining conserved karyotype features. The results we obtained indicated that several satDNAs (50% of satellite sequences in P. mesopotamicus and 43% in C. macropomum) show levels of conservation between the analyzed species, in the nucleotide and chromosomal levels. We propose that long-life cycles and few genomic changes could slow down rates of satDNA differentiation.

Keywords