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Single-fly genome assemblies fill major phylogenomic gaps across the Drosophilidae Tree of Life.

Authors :
Bernard Y Kim
Hannah R Gellert
Samuel H Church
Anton Suvorov
Sean S Anderson
Olga Barmina
Sofia G Beskid
Aaron A Comeault
K Nicole Crown
Sarah E Diamond
Steve Dorus
Takako Fujichika
James A Hemker
Jan Hrcek
Maaria Kankare
Toru Katoh
Karl N Magnacca
Ryan A Martin
Teruyuki Matsunaga
Matthew J Medeiros
Danny E Miller
Scott Pitnick
Michele Schiffer
Sara Simoni
Tessa E Steenwinkel
Zeeshan A Syed
Aya Takahashi
Kevin H-C Wei
Tsuya Yokoyama
Michael B Eisen
Artyom Kopp
Daniel Matute
Darren J Obbard
Patrick M O'Grady
Donald K Price
Masanori J Toda
Thomas Werner
Dmitri A Petrov
Source :
PLoS Biology, Vol 22, Iss 7, p e3002697 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2024.

Abstract

Long-read sequencing is driving rapid progress in genome assembly across all major groups of life, including species of the family Drosophilidae, a longtime model system for genetics, genomics, and evolution. We previously developed a cost-effective hybrid Oxford Nanopore (ONT) long-read and Illumina short-read sequencing approach and used it to assemble 101 drosophilid genomes from laboratory cultures, greatly increasing the number of genome assemblies for this taxonomic group. The next major challenge is to address the laboratory culture bias in taxon sampling by sequencing genomes of species that cannot easily be reared in the lab. Here, we build upon our previous methods to perform amplification-free ONT sequencing of single wild flies obtained either directly from the field or from ethanol-preserved specimens in museum collections, greatly improving the representation of lesser studied drosophilid taxa in whole-genome data. Using Illumina Novaseq X Plus and ONT P2 sequencers with R10.4.1 chemistry, we set a new benchmark for inexpensive hybrid genome assembly at US $150 per genome while assembling genomes from as little as 35 ng of genomic DNA from a single fly. We present 183 new genome assemblies for 179 species as a resource for drosophilid systematics, phylogenetics, and comparative genomics. Of these genomes, 62 are from pooled lab strains and 121 from single adult flies. Despite the sample limitations of working with small insects, most single-fly diploid assemblies are comparable in contiguity (>1 Mb contig N50), completeness (>98% complete dipteran BUSCOs), and accuracy (>QV40 genome-wide with ONT R10.4.1) to assemblies from inbred lines. We present a well-resolved multi-locus phylogeny for 360 drosophilid and 4 outgroup species encompassing all publicly available (as of August 2023) genomes for this group. Finally, we present a Progressive Cactus whole-genome, reference-free alignment built from a subset of 298 suitably high-quality drosophilid genomes. The new assemblies and alignment, along with updated laboratory protocols and computational pipelines, are released as an open resource and as a tool for studying evolution at the scale of an entire insect family.

Subjects

Subjects :
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15449173 and 15457885
Volume :
22
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2beb7f36060d498498a23258a4f431c2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002697