A chromosome-level assembly of the cat flea genome uncovers rampant gene duplication and genome size plasticity

Author:

Driscoll Timothy P.ORCID,Verhoeve Victoria I.,Gillespie Joseph J.,Johnston J. Spencer,Guillotte Mark L.,Rennoll-Bankert Kristen E.,Rahman M. Sayeedur,Hagen Darren,Elsik Christine G.,Macaluso Kevin R.,Azad Abdu F.

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFleas (Insecta: Siphonaptera) are small flightless parasites of birds and mammals; their blood-feeding can transmit many serious pathogens (i.e. the etiological agents of bubonic plague, endemic and murine typhus). The lack of flea genome assemblies has hindered research, especially comparisons to other disease vectors. Accordingly, we sequenced the genome of the cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis, an insect with substantial human health and veterinary importance across the globe.ResultsBy combining Illumina and PacBio sequencing with Hi-C scaffolding techniques, we generated a chromosome-level genome assembly for C. felis. Unexpectedly, our assembly revealed extensive gene duplication across the entire genome, exemplified by ∼38% of protein-coding genes with two or more copies and over 4,000 tRNA genes. A broad range of genome size determinations (433-551 Mb) for individual fleas sampled across different populations supports the widespread presence of fluctuating copy number variation (CNV) in C. felis. Similarly broad genome sizes were also calculated for individuals of Xenopsylla cheopis (Oriental rat flea), indicating that this remarkable “genome-in-flux” phenomenon could be a siphonapteran-wide trait. Finally, from the C. felis sequence reads we also generated closed genomes for two novel strains of Wolbachia, one parasitic and one symbiotic, found to co-infect individual fleas.ConclusionRampant CNV in C. felis has dire implications for gene-targeting pest control measures and stands to complicate standard normalization procedures utilized in comparative transcriptomics analysis. Coupled with co-infection by novel Wolbachia endosymbionts – potential tools for blocking pathogen transmission – these oddities highlight a unique and underappreciated disease vector.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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