A reference genome for ecological restoration of the sunflower sea star, Pycnopodia helianthoides

Author:

Schiebelhut Lauren M1ORCID,DeBiasse Melissa B12ORCID,Gabriel Lars3ORCID,Hoff Katharina J3ORCID,Dawson Michael N1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Life & Environmental Sciences, University of California , Merced, CA , United States

2. Department of Biology, Radford University , Radford, VA , United States

3. Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science & Center for Functional Genomics of Microbes, University of Greifswald , Greifswald , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Wildlife diseases, such as the sea star wasting (SSW) epizootic that outbroke in the mid-2010s, appear to be associated with acute and/or chronic abiotic environmental change; dissociating the effects of different drivers can be difficult. The sunflower sea star, Pycnopodia helianthoides, was the species most severely impacted during the SSW outbreak, which overlapped with periods of anomalous atmospheric and oceanographic conditions, and there is not yet a consensus on the cause(s). Genomic data may reveal underlying molecular signatures that implicate a subset of factors and, thus, clarify past events while also setting the scene for effective restoration efforts. To advance this goal, we used Pacific Biosciences HiFi long sequencing reads and Dovetail Omni-C proximity reads to generate a highly contiguous genome assembly that was then annotated using RNA-seq-informed gene prediction. The genome assembly is 484 Mb long, with contig N50 of 1.9 Mb, scaffold N50 of 21.8 Mb, BUSCO completeness score of 96.1%, and 22 major scaffolds consistent with prior evidence that sea star genomes comprise 22 autosomes. These statistics generally fall between those of other recently assembled chromosome-scale assemblies for two species in the distantly related asteroid genus Pisaster. These novel genomic resources for P. helianthoides will underwrite population genomic, comparative genomic, and phylogenomic analyses—as well as their integration across scales—of SSW and environmental stressors.

Funder

Revive & Restore’s Wild Genomes Program

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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