PLoS Genetics (Apr 2015)

Genome sequencing of the perciform fish Larimichthys crocea provides insights into molecular and genetic mechanisms of stress adaptation.

  • Jingqun Ao,
  • Yinnan Mu,
  • Li-Xin Xiang,
  • DingDing Fan,
  • MingJi Feng,
  • Shicui Zhang,
  • Qiong Shi,
  • Lv-Yun Zhu,
  • Ting Li,
  • Yang Ding,
  • Li Nie,
  • Qiuhua Li,
  • Wei-Ren Dong,
  • Liang Jiang,
  • Bing Sun,
  • XinHui Zhang,
  • Mingyu Li,
  • Hai-Qi Zhang,
  • ShangBo Xie,
  • YaBing Zhu,
  • XuanTing Jiang,
  • Xianhui Wang,
  • Pengfei Mu,
  • Wei Chen,
  • Zhen Yue,
  • Zhuo Wang,
  • Jun Wang,
  • Jian-Zhong Shao,
  • Xinhua Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. e1005118

Abstract

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The large yellow croaker Larimichthys crocea (L. crocea) is one of the most economically important marine fish in China and East Asian countries. It also exhibits peculiar behavioral and physiological characteristics, especially sensitive to various environmental stresses, such as hypoxia and air exposure. These traits may render L. crocea a good model for investigating the response mechanisms to environmental stress. To understand the molecular and genetic mechanisms underlying the adaptation and response of L. crocea to environmental stress, we sequenced and assembled the genome of L. crocea using a bacterial artificial chromosome and whole-genome shotgun hierarchical strategy. The final genome assembly was 679 Mb, with a contig N50 of 63.11 kb and a scaffold N50 of 1.03 Mb, containing 25,401 protein-coding genes. Gene families underlying adaptive behaviours, such as vision-related crystallins, olfactory receptors, and auditory sense-related genes, were significantly expanded in the genome of L. crocea relative to those of other vertebrates. Transcriptome analyses of the hypoxia-exposed L. crocea brain revealed new aspects of neuro-endocrine-immune/metabolism regulatory networks that may help the fish to avoid cerebral inflammatory injury and maintain energy balance under hypoxia. Proteomics data demonstrate that skin mucus of the air-exposed L. crocea had a complex composition, with an unexpectedly high number of proteins (3,209), suggesting its multiple protective mechanisms involved in antioxidant functions, oxygen transport, immune defence, and osmotic and ionic regulation. Our results reveal the molecular and genetic basis of fish adaptation and response to hypoxia and air exposure. The data generated by this study will provide valuable resources for the genetic improvement of stress resistance and yield potential in L. crocea.