A chromosome-level genome assembly for the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas)

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Abstract

The Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) is a marine bivalve species with vital roles in coastal ecosystems and aquaculture globally. While extensive genomic tools are available forC. gigas, highly contiguous reference genomes are required to support both fundamental and applied research. In the current study, high coverage long and short read sequence data generated on Pacific Biosciences and Illumina platforms from a single female individual specimen was used to generate an initial assembly, which was then scaffolded into 10 pseudo chromosomes using both Hi-C sequencing and a high density SNP linkage map. The final assembly has a scaffold N50 of 58.4 Mb and a contig N50 of 1.8 Mb, representing a step advance on the previously publishedC. gigasassembly. The new assembly was annotated using Pacific Biosciences Iso-Seq and Illumina RNA-Seq data, identifying 30K putative protein coding genes, with an average of 3.9 transcripts per gene. Annotation of putative repeat elements highlighted an inverse relationship with gene density, and identified putative centromeres of the metacentric chromosomes. An enrichment ofHelitronrolling circle transponsable elements was observed, suggesting their potential role in shaping the evolution of theC. gigasgenome. This new chromosome-level assembly will be an enabling resource for genetics and genomics studies to support fundamental insight into bivalve biology, as well as for genetic improvement ofC. gigasin aquaculture breeding programmes.

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