A chromosome-scale high-contiguity genome assembly of the cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus)

Author:

Winter Sven1ORCID,Meißner René1ORCID,Greve Carola2ORCID,Ben Hamadou Alexander2,Horin Petr34ORCID,Prost Stefan5678ORCID,Burger Pamela A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna , Vienna , Austria

2. LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (LOEWE-TBG) , Frankfurt am Main , Germany

3. Department of Animal Genetics, University of Veterinary Sciences , Brno , Czech Republic

4. Central European Institute of Technology, University of Veterinary Sciences Brno (CEITEC Vetuni) , Brno , Czech Republic

5. Ecology and Genetics Research Unit, University of Oulu , Oulu , Finland

6. Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna , Vienna , Austria

7. Natural History Museum Vienna, Central Research Laboratories , Vienna , Austria

8. South African National Biodiversity Institute, National Zoological Garden , Pretoria , South Africa

Abstract

Abstract The cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus, SCHREBER 1775) is a large felid and is considered the fastest land animal. Historically, it inhabited open grassland across Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and southwestern Asia; however, only small and fragmented populations remain today. Here, we present a de novo genome assembly of the cheetah based on PacBio continuous long reads and Hi-C proximity ligation data. The final assembly (VMU_Ajub_asm_v1.0) has a total length of 2.38 Gb, of which 99.7% are anchored into the expected 19 chromosome-scale scaffolds. The contig and scaffold N50 values of 96.8 Mb and 144.4 Mb, respectively, a BUSCO completeness of 95.4% and a k-mer completeness of 98.4%, emphasize the high quality of the assembly. Furthermore, annotation of the assembly identified 23,622 genes and a repeat content of 40.4%. This new highly contiguous and chromosome-scale assembly will greatly benefit conservation and evolutionary genomic analyses and will be a valuable resource, e.g., to gain a detailed understanding of the function and diversity of immune response genes in felids.

Funder

Central European Science Partnership

Austrian Science Fund

Czech Republic

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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