UB and IRBio experts sequence the genome of an endemic spider from the Canary Islands


A research team of the Faculty of Biology and the Biodiversity Research Institute (IRBio) of the University of Barcelona has sequenced the genome of the spider

Dysdera silvatica

Schmidt 1981, an endemic species living in the laurel forests in the islands La Gomera, La Palma, and El Hierro -in the Canary Islands (Spain).

The new study reveals the first genome sequencing of an arthropod in the Canary Islands, an archipelago with a rich biodiversity regarding endemic species that are distributed around the insular area.

Participants in the new study, published in the journal

GigaScience

, are the experts Julio Rozas, Miquel Arnedo, José Francisco Sánchez-Herrero, Cristina Frías-López, Paula Escuer, Silvia Hinojosa-Alvarez and Alejandro Sánchez-Gracia (UB-IRBio).


Dysdera sylvatica

: a ravening predator in the Canary laurel forests

The

Dysdera

genus, which belongs to the species

Dysdera silvatica

, includes more than 250 spider species mainly distributed around the Mediterranean area. The Macaronesian archipelagos represent the western limits of the distribution of this taxon, which reached a significant diversification in the Canary Islands, where there are about 50 endemic species currently.

“One of these species is

Dysdera silvatica

, integrated in an evolutionary lineage that became one of the main predators -both in abundance and diversity- in the insular terrestrial invertebrate trophic networks”, notes Professor Miquel Arnedo, from the Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences of the Faculty of Biology and the Biodiversity Research Institute (IRBio) of the UB.

“The species D. silvatica is a generalist predator. Unlike other spider groups, the

Dysdera

includes experts on hunting and consumption of terrestrial isopods. All these species live in the Canary Islands, where the crustacean trophic specialization seems to have evolved independently several times”, adds the researcher, head of the research group on Arthropod Systematics and Animal Evolution of the UB.

The first genome sequencing in the Dysderoidea superfamily

This is the first sequencing of the nuclear and mitochondrial genome for a species of the Dysderoidea superfamily, and the second one known in the Synspermiata group, one of the main spider lineages. Regarding this group, the first species with the available genomic data was the brown recluse spider (Loxoceles reclusa Gertsch & Mulaik, 1940), a species distributed around the American continent and quite known for its necrotic venom.

According to the conclusions, the genome of the D. silvatica species is large (1.7 Gb) and shows a high complexity, with a high fraction of repetitive elements. According to Professor Julio Rozas (UB-IRBio), who co-led the study together with Alejandro Sánchez-Garcia, “Within this study, we created a 1.4 Gb genomic sequencing assembly, 54 % of which is built by repetitive elements”

“We identified and characterized a total of 36,000 protein-coding gens”, notes Professor Julio Rozas (UB-IRBio), head of the research group on Evolutionary Genomics and Bioinformatics at the UB, part of the platform Bioinformatics Barcelona (BIB).

The D. silvatica species has a diploid chromosome set of six pairs of autosomes and two (females are XX) or one (males are X0) sex chromosomes (XX-X0), females have six non-sexual chromosome pairs (autosomes) and the XX sexual paired chromosomes. Males have six pairs of autosomes and only one X sexual chromosome.

Third generation sequencing techniques to treat a complex genome

The research study to sequence the genome of

Dysdera silvatica

started about five years ago with the application of next generation massive sequencing (NGS) such as Illumina. With this protocol, they created one billion short sequences (100 paired bases) that were not enough to get a quality assembly for the complex genome of the species.

Therefore, the research team completed these data with PacBio and Nanopore single molecule sequencing (SMS) techniques, “more expensive but more efficient methodologies to obtain larger genome sequencing, and provide a quality genomic assembly using the hybrid assembly strategy, combining data from the obtained sequencing through different technologies”, notes José Francisco Sánchez-Herrero, member of the Department of Genetics, Microbiology and Statistics of IRBio and first author of the article.

Ecology, evolution and reproductive behavior

From a global perspective, the study brings new views to know more about the genetic bases of the eco-phenotype change that takes place during the adaptive radiation phenomena over biological evolution. In particular, the models from the

Dysdera

genus in the Canary Islands, the genome sequencing of this first species can bring valuable information on the underlying genetic architecture in the phenotype and physiological changes related to the trophic specialization, as well as the underground environment adaptations, a natural environment where some species got used to live exclusively in the lava tubes.

Regarding their reproductive behavior, the

Dysderidae

family includes species that show a cryptic female choice mechanism, that is, a reproductive strategy which consists on the female’s post-copulatory choice of a male’s sperm to fertilize their ova. This choice is conducted through a complex system of diverticulum and glands associated with the female vulva. Knowing the features of the genome of a species from this family could contribute to determine the genetic bases of this behavior, through a comparative study of several regions of the genome under different selective constrictions between sexes, and among species with different sexual strategies.

Last, the study provides useful resources to treat studies on other evolutionary and essential issues, such as the origins and evolution of products with medical and commercial interests produced by spiders (venom, silk, etc.).

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This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-09/uob-uai090519.php

Rosa Martínez
34-934-035-544
[email protected]
http://www.ub.edu 

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