Genome Assembly of the Dyeing Poison Frog Provides Insights into the Dynamics of Transposable Element and Genome-Size Evolution

Author:

Dittrich Carolin12,Hoelzl Franz2,Smith Steve2,Fouilloux Chloe A1,Parker Darren J3,O’Connell Lauren A4ORCID,Knowles Lucy S5,Hughes Margaret6,Fewings Ade7,Morgan Rhys3,Rojas Bibiana12ORCID,Comeault Aaron A3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Environmental Sciences, University of Jyväskylä , Jyväskylä , Finland

2. Department of Interdisciplinary Life Sciences, Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, University of Veterinary Medicine , Vienna , Austria

3. School of Environmental and Natural Sciences, Molecular Ecology & Evolution Group, Bangor University , Bangor , UK

4. Department of Biology, Stanford University , Stanford , USA

5. NERC Environmental Omics Facility, University of Sheffield , Sheffield , UK

6. Centre for Genomic Research, University of Liverpool , Liverpool , UK

7. Supercomputing Wales, Digital Services, Bangor University , Bangor , UK

Abstract

Abstract Genome size varies greatly across the tree of life and transposable elements are an important contributor to this variation. Among vertebrates, amphibians display the greatest variation in genome size, making them ideal models to explore the causes and consequences of genome size variation. However, high-quality genome assemblies for amphibians have, until recently, been rare. Here, we generate a high-quality genome assembly for the dyeing poison frog, Dendrobates tinctorius. We compare this assembly to publicly available frog genomes and find evidence for both large-scale conserved synteny and widespread rearrangements between frog lineages. Comparing conserved orthologs annotated in these genomes revealed a strong correlation between genome size and gene size. To explore the cause of gene-size variation, we quantified the location of transposable elements relative to gene features and find that the accumulation of transposable elements in introns has played an important role in the evolution of gene size in D. tinctorius, while estimates of insertion times suggest that many insertion events are recent and species-specific. Finally, we carry out population-scale mobile-element sequencing and show that the diversity and abundance of transposable elements in poison frog genomes can complicate genotyping from repetitive element sequence anchors. Our results show that transposable elements have clearly played an important role in the evolution of large genome size in D. tinctorius. Future studies are needed to fully understand the dynamics of transposable element evolution and to optimize primer or bait design for cost-effective population-level genotyping in species with large, repetitive genomes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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