The Genome of Antarctic Copepoda Tigriopus kingsejongensis and Adaptation to Life in the Antarctic Environment
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Title
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The Genome of Antarctic Copepoda Tigriopus kingsejongensis and Adaptation to Life in the Antarctic Environment
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Other Titles
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남극 요각류 Tigriopus kingsejongensis의 유전체와 남극 환경에 대한 적응 연구
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Authors
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Kang, Seunghyun
Park, Hyun
Kim, Sanghee
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Issue Date
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2015
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Citation
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Kang, Seunghyun, Park, Hyun, Kim, Sanghee. 2015. The Genome of Antarctic Copepoda Tigriopus kingsejongensis and Adaptation to Life in the Antarctic Environment. Annual meeting of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. Hofburg Palace, Vienna. 2015.07.12~2015.07.16.
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Abstract
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Antarctic marine invertebrates face extremely cold temperatures and many of decapod crustacean
and fish groups became extinct because of extreme climate for over the last 30 million years.
In that matter, species which have survived in Antarctic region may have evolutionary strategies and
understanding their adaptation mechanisms in response to the extreme environment has received
considerable attention. However, genome-wide studies about the molecular basis underlying these
mechanisms is still limited to fishes and microbes. Here we present the first draft genome sequence
and annotation for Antarctic copepoda Tigriopus kingsejongensis, the first Antarctic Crustacean to
be sequenced. We sequenced genomic DNA and RNA of T. kingsejongensis using Illumina Miseq
platform and the libraries were prepared with average coverage of 120.7x. The final assembly
consists of 48,368 contigs with an N50 contig length of 17.5 kilobases (kb) and 27,823 scaffolds
with N50 contig length of 138.2 kb and a total of 39,717 coding genes were inferred using the
MAKER annotation pipeline approach. The comparative genome analysis among 3,254 orthologs in
4 arthropod species (T. kingsejongensis, Tigriopus japonicus, Daphnia pulex and Drosophila
melanogaster) revealed the T. kingsejongensis specific signals of molecular adaptation in genes
associated with mitochondrial electron transport, deacetylase activity, proteasomal ubiquitindependent protein catabolic process, endoplasmic reticulum, and tryptophan metabolism. This
suggest that T. kingsejongensis have changed adaptation mechanisms such as energy production
and metabolism, proteolytic complex, and sterol biosynthesis. The results have important
implications for understanding of Crustacean evolution and their adaptations to the Antarctic
envir
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URI
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https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/8180
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Conference Name
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Annual meeting of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution
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Conference Place
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Hofburg Palace, Vienna
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Conference Date
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2015.07.12~2015.07.16
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Type
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Proceeding
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Indexed
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Pro(초록)국외
- Appears in Collections
- 2014-2016, Antarctic Organisms: Cold-Adaptation Mechanism and Its Application (14-16) / Park; Hyun (PE14070; PE15070; PE16070)
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