Abstract
AbstractTranscriptomes from sponges are important resources for studying the stress responses of these ecologically important filter feeders, the interactions between sponges and their symbionts, and the evolutionary history of metazoans. Here, we generated reference transcriptomes for two common and cosmopolitan Indo-Pacific sponge species: Carteriospongia foliascens and Cliona orientalis. We also created a reference transcriptome for the primary symbiont of C. orientalis – Gerakladium endoclionum. To ensure a full repertoire of transcripts were included, clones of each sponge species were exposed to a range of individual stressors: decreased salinity, elevated temperature, elevated suspended sediment concentrations, sediment deposition and light attenuation. RNA extracted from all treatments was pooled for each species, using equal concentrations from each clone. Sequencing of pooled RNA yielded 409 and 418 million raw reads for C. foliascens and C. orientalis holobionts (host and symbionts), respectively. Reads underwent quality trimming before assembly with Trinity. Assemblies were filtered into sponge-specific or, for G. endoclionum, symbiont-specific assemblies. Assemblies for C. foliascens, C. orientalis, and G. endoclionum contained 67,304, 82,895, and 28,670 contigs, respectively. Contigs represented 15,248-37,344 isogroups (∼genes) per assembly, and N50s ranged 1,672-4,355 bp. Gene ortholog analysis verified a high level of completeness and quality for sponge-specific transcriptomes, with an average 93% of core EuKaryotic Orthologous Groups (KOGs) and 98% of single-copy metazoan core gene orthologs identified. The G. endoclionum assembly was partial with only 56% of core KOGs and 32% of single-copy eukaryotic core gene orthologs identified. These reference transcriptomes are a valuable resource for future molecular research aimed at assessing sponge stress responses.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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