New insights into immune genes and other expanded gene families of the house fly, Musca domestica, from an improved whole genome sequence

Author:

Meisel Richard P.1ORCID,Freeman Jamie C.2ORCID,Asgari Danial1,Llaca Victor3ORCID,Fengler Kevin A.3,Mann David4ORCID,Rastogi Achal4ORCID,Loso Mike4,Geng Chaoxian4ORCID,Scott Jeffrey G.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Biochemistry, Science and Research 2 University of Houston Houston Texas USA

2. Department of Entomology, Comstock Hall Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

3. Corteva Agriscience Johnston Iowa USA

4. Corteva Agriscience Indianapolis Indiana USA

Abstract

AbstractThe house fly, Musca domestica, is a pest of livestock, transmits pathogens of human diseases, and is a model organism in multiple biological research areas. The first house fly genome assembly was published in 2014 and has been of tremendous use to the community of house fly biologists, but that genome is discontiguous and incomplete by contemporary standards. To improve the house fly reference genome, we sequenced, assembled, and annotated the house fly genome using improved techniques and technologies that were not available at the time of the original genome sequencing project. The new genome assembly is substantially more contiguous and complete than the previous genome. The new genome assembly has a scaffold N50 of 12.46 Mb, which is a 50‐fold improvement over the previous assembly. In addition, the new genome assembly is within 1% of the estimated genome size based on flow cytometry, whereas the previous assembly was missing nearly one‐third of the predicted genome sequence. The improved genome assembly has much more contiguous scaffolds containing large gene families. To provide an example of the benefit of the new genome, we used it to investigate tandemly arrayed immune gene families. The new contiguous assembly of these loci provides a clearer picture of the regulation of the expression of immune genes, and it leads to new insights into the selection pressures that shape their evolution.

Funder

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,General Medicine,Biochemistry,Physiology

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