The utility of transcriptomics in the conservation of sensitive and economically important species

IF 0.6 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
B. Patnaik, Yong Seok Lee
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Justifying the plasticity of species adaptability could ensure informed decisions on proposing suitable habitats for species translocations if the current distributional range is disturbed. The 'omics' resources (especially generated by high-throughput RNA and DNA sequencing approaches) have intervened on a larger scale recently to understand species physiology, evolutionary biology and ecology. This has supported enriched information on the evolution and evaluation of adaptive phenotypes in natural populations as well as the mechanism of physiological responses to various environmental perturbations (Alvarez et al., 2015; De Wit et al., 2015; Evans, 2015; Connon et al., 2018). Transcriptomics can unravel unparalleled mysteries in the context of conservation of sensitive and economically important species. Being smaller than genomes and tissue-specific, it reduces the amount of data generated and focuses on candidate gene expressions, understanding a species' response to environmental changes. It gives sufficient scope for studying the biology of a non-model species at the molecular level by de novo assembled transcript generation and annotation involving predicted gene function. Apart from the ontology and homology-based functional annotations, the transcriptomes can also be mined for the discovery of genetic markers such as simple sequence repeats (SSRs) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) vital for assessments of genetic diversity and exploring species from newer habitats. Ultimately, such resources should be effectively integrated into management decisions and policies to contribute towards conservation. Utilization of transcriptome knowledge in conservation remains rare due to unfamiliarity of the interpretation of complex molecular data for managers. Hence, to overcome such a knowledge divide, the physiologists and the data scientists need to build partnerships with regulatory agencies and resource managers to translate transcriptomic evaluations to well-characterized molecular thresholds that can act as sensible markers to predict a species' adaptive plasticity in invoking compensatory mechanisms leading to recovery or non-recovery. Until and unless such conservative benchmarks are designed, the utility of the transcriptomes into management actions and policies seems debated. I have been associated with the Korean threatened species initiative for the past eight years as a researcher. The initiative has prioritized the Illumina HiSeq-based short-read platform for transcriptome generation and the Trinity suite for de novo assembly of clean reads. Further, a locally-curated database known as the PANM database (Protostome DB) has facilitated gene discovery in Red List molluscan and butterfly species of Korea that are threatened of extinction. Mostly, the transcriptomics pipeline adopted under this initiative has cataloged the functional resources in the context of immunity, growth and reproduction of species. Large-scale screening of SSR markers from transcriptome has highlighted the possibility of addressing species richness and diversity in disturbed natural habitats and the feasibility of finding species in newer habitats. This initiative has provided the first report to record ecologically-relevant traits from endangered lycaenid butterflies such as Protantigius superans and Spindasis takanosis and the nymphalid butterfly, Fabriciana nerippe (Patnaik et al., 2015; Hwang et al., 2016). Further, the transcriptome profile of the Asian giant hornet, Vespa mandarinia was able to screen new genes to understand the physiological attributes of the wasp enlisted as threatened species in Korea (Patnaik et al., 2016). Among the threatened molluscan species of Korea, the land snails such as Aegista chejuensis and Aegista quelpartensis (Kang et al., 2016), Koreanohadra kurodana (Kang et al., 2016), Satsuma myomphala (Kang et al., 2017) and Ellobium chinense (Kang et al., 2018) were prioritized for transcriptome sequencing. The detailed molecular components ascribed to innate immunity pathways were also screened from the transcriptome of a freshwater mussel, Cristaria plicata endangered in Korea (Patnaik et al., 2016) and an air-breathing land slug, Incilaria fruhstorferi (Patnaik et al., 2019). The discovery of the immunity components was useful in drafting a conceptual map of innate immune signaling in molluscs by addressing the putative involvement of the orthologs at different stages of pathway. Such resources are vital for functional genomics applications as they serve to understand the resistance or susceptibility of the host to microorganisms. De novo transcriptome of endangered triton shell, Charonia lampas sauliae identified transcripts that are channel proteins blocked by tetrodotoxin synthesized by symbiotic bacteria inhabiting the shells. Additionally, conotoxin superfamily peptides were discovered that could be synthesized for therapeutic interventions such as anti-cancer and pain-relief agents (Fassio et al., 2019; Yao et al., 2019; Hwang et al., 2021).The transcriptome of endangered diving beetle, Cybister japonicus and endangered dung beetle Copris tripartitus also enriched information on molecular resources including SSR discovery (Hwang et al., 2018; Hwang et al., 2023). With the large-scale availability of 'omics' resources, the threatened species initiative is taking proactive steps to complement local conservation efforts in the country. In India, there is a lack of similar consortium-based initiatives for understanding the local biodiversity of a region. This has restricted access to high-throughput molecular resources from the local biodiversity for meeting the challenges in health, agrifood and the environment. Hence, a consortium such as the National Biodiversity Genomics (NBG) consortium addressing the genome or transcriptome-guided discovery of molecular resources can act as a knowledge hub supporting environmental sustainability (Fig. 1). The consortium will be able to develop expertise in database development, bigdata analysis and bioinformatics, genetic diversity analysis and functional genomics resources. The consortium will also facilitate new opportunities in bigdata science, research-academia-industry partnerships for new product development, entrepreneurship, and outreach activities and invoke a forum for collaborations with International genomics consortiums. Such a consortium will keep the academics interested in the research supporting environmental sustainability with opportunities for workshops/ training, open-learning and modular courses, environmental education programs to encourage local action groups and conservation managers and create avenues for convergence research for resource utilization. Building 'omics' data infrastructure in a consortium to study the conservation of sensitive and economically-important species is needed in the country to invigorate attention on biodiversity conservation. In summary, such a consortium will build large-scale data resources, maximize the impact of national research infrastructure, build scientific capabilities, catalyze scientific collaborations and international linkages, and would accelerate research and translation into industry. I sincerely wish that the reference transcriptome characterization of native flora and fauna would be taken up in a consortium mode to unravel the unparalleled benefits of the resources in multi-dimensional research and development objectives. I am happy to share my research experience and expertise through this editorial on the 'Journal of Environmental Biology (JEB)' platform- a journal that I have been associated with for the last 15 years in different capacities as an author, reviewer, and editor. I appreciate the visions of Professor Dalela and the hardworking team over the years to make this journal a global environmental outlook tool for the benefit of society. Acknowledgment: This research was supported by Korea Basic Science Institute (National research Facilities and Equipment Center) grant funded by the Ministry of Education (2022R1A6C101B794), the National Research Foundation (NRF-2021R1A6A1A03039503 / NRF-2017R1D1A3B06034971) and Soonchunhyang University Research Fund.Further, the authors solicit the support received from the Agreement of Cooperation between Fakir Mohan University, Balasore, India and KNAR, Soonchunhyang University, Asan, Korea.","PeriodicalId":15688,"journal":{"name":"Journal of environmental biology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of environmental biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22438/jeb/44/4/editorial","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The connection between the central dogma of biology [DNA --(Transcription)---› RNA –(Translation)--› Protein] and the 'omics' resources obtained from each molecule are now being exploited by conservation managers to protect biodiversity and ecosystems for sustainable development. Biodiversity doesn't necessarily mean the total number of species, it is more complex and includes genetic diversity within species and the diversity of habitats. Land-use changes, direct harvest, various forms of pollution, and climate change are the biggest threats to biodiversity, most of which are hardly documented at the molecular level to guide conservation actions and stop extinctions. Justifying the plasticity of species adaptability could ensure informed decisions on proposing suitable habitats for species translocations if the current distributional range is disturbed. The 'omics' resources (especially generated by high-throughput RNA and DNA sequencing approaches) have intervened on a larger scale recently to understand species physiology, evolutionary biology and ecology. This has supported enriched information on the evolution and evaluation of adaptive phenotypes in natural populations as well as the mechanism of physiological responses to various environmental perturbations (Alvarez et al., 2015; De Wit et al., 2015; Evans, 2015; Connon et al., 2018). Transcriptomics can unravel unparalleled mysteries in the context of conservation of sensitive and economically important species. Being smaller than genomes and tissue-specific, it reduces the amount of data generated and focuses on candidate gene expressions, understanding a species' response to environmental changes. It gives sufficient scope for studying the biology of a non-model species at the molecular level by de novo assembled transcript generation and annotation involving predicted gene function. Apart from the ontology and homology-based functional annotations, the transcriptomes can also be mined for the discovery of genetic markers such as simple sequence repeats (SSRs) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) vital for assessments of genetic diversity and exploring species from newer habitats. Ultimately, such resources should be effectively integrated into management decisions and policies to contribute towards conservation. Utilization of transcriptome knowledge in conservation remains rare due to unfamiliarity of the interpretation of complex molecular data for managers. Hence, to overcome such a knowledge divide, the physiologists and the data scientists need to build partnerships with regulatory agencies and resource managers to translate transcriptomic evaluations to well-characterized molecular thresholds that can act as sensible markers to predict a species' adaptive plasticity in invoking compensatory mechanisms leading to recovery or non-recovery. Until and unless such conservative benchmarks are designed, the utility of the transcriptomes into management actions and policies seems debated. I have been associated with the Korean threatened species initiative for the past eight years as a researcher. The initiative has prioritized the Illumina HiSeq-based short-read platform for transcriptome generation and the Trinity suite for de novo assembly of clean reads. Further, a locally-curated database known as the PANM database (Protostome DB) has facilitated gene discovery in Red List molluscan and butterfly species of Korea that are threatened of extinction. Mostly, the transcriptomics pipeline adopted under this initiative has cataloged the functional resources in the context of immunity, growth and reproduction of species. Large-scale screening of SSR markers from transcriptome has highlighted the possibility of addressing species richness and diversity in disturbed natural habitats and the feasibility of finding species in newer habitats. This initiative has provided the first report to record ecologically-relevant traits from endangered lycaenid butterflies such as Protantigius superans and Spindasis takanosis and the nymphalid butterfly, Fabriciana nerippe (Patnaik et al., 2015; Hwang et al., 2016). Further, the transcriptome profile of the Asian giant hornet, Vespa mandarinia was able to screen new genes to understand the physiological attributes of the wasp enlisted as threatened species in Korea (Patnaik et al., 2016). Among the threatened molluscan species of Korea, the land snails such as Aegista chejuensis and Aegista quelpartensis (Kang et al., 2016), Koreanohadra kurodana (Kang et al., 2016), Satsuma myomphala (Kang et al., 2017) and Ellobium chinense (Kang et al., 2018) were prioritized for transcriptome sequencing. The detailed molecular components ascribed to innate immunity pathways were also screened from the transcriptome of a freshwater mussel, Cristaria plicata endangered in Korea (Patnaik et al., 2016) and an air-breathing land slug, Incilaria fruhstorferi (Patnaik et al., 2019). The discovery of the immunity components was useful in drafting a conceptual map of innate immune signaling in molluscs by addressing the putative involvement of the orthologs at different stages of pathway. Such resources are vital for functional genomics applications as they serve to understand the resistance or susceptibility of the host to microorganisms. De novo transcriptome of endangered triton shell, Charonia lampas sauliae identified transcripts that are channel proteins blocked by tetrodotoxin synthesized by symbiotic bacteria inhabiting the shells. Additionally, conotoxin superfamily peptides were discovered that could be synthesized for therapeutic interventions such as anti-cancer and pain-relief agents (Fassio et al., 2019; Yao et al., 2019; Hwang et al., 2021).The transcriptome of endangered diving beetle, Cybister japonicus and endangered dung beetle Copris tripartitus also enriched information on molecular resources including SSR discovery (Hwang et al., 2018; Hwang et al., 2023). With the large-scale availability of 'omics' resources, the threatened species initiative is taking proactive steps to complement local conservation efforts in the country. In India, there is a lack of similar consortium-based initiatives for understanding the local biodiversity of a region. This has restricted access to high-throughput molecular resources from the local biodiversity for meeting the challenges in health, agrifood and the environment. Hence, a consortium such as the National Biodiversity Genomics (NBG) consortium addressing the genome or transcriptome-guided discovery of molecular resources can act as a knowledge hub supporting environmental sustainability (Fig. 1). The consortium will be able to develop expertise in database development, bigdata analysis and bioinformatics, genetic diversity analysis and functional genomics resources. The consortium will also facilitate new opportunities in bigdata science, research-academia-industry partnerships for new product development, entrepreneurship, and outreach activities and invoke a forum for collaborations with International genomics consortiums. Such a consortium will keep the academics interested in the research supporting environmental sustainability with opportunities for workshops/ training, open-learning and modular courses, environmental education programs to encourage local action groups and conservation managers and create avenues for convergence research for resource utilization. Building 'omics' data infrastructure in a consortium to study the conservation of sensitive and economically-important species is needed in the country to invigorate attention on biodiversity conservation. In summary, such a consortium will build large-scale data resources, maximize the impact of national research infrastructure, build scientific capabilities, catalyze scientific collaborations and international linkages, and would accelerate research and translation into industry. I sincerely wish that the reference transcriptome characterization of native flora and fauna would be taken up in a consortium mode to unravel the unparalleled benefits of the resources in multi-dimensional research and development objectives. I am happy to share my research experience and expertise through this editorial on the 'Journal of Environmental Biology (JEB)' platform- a journal that I have been associated with for the last 15 years in different capacities as an author, reviewer, and editor. I appreciate the visions of Professor Dalela and the hardworking team over the years to make this journal a global environmental outlook tool for the benefit of society. Acknowledgment: This research was supported by Korea Basic Science Institute (National research Facilities and Equipment Center) grant funded by the Ministry of Education (2022R1A6C101B794), the National Research Foundation (NRF-2021R1A6A1A03039503 / NRF-2017R1D1A3B06034971) and Soonchunhyang University Research Fund.Further, the authors solicit the support received from the Agreement of Cooperation between Fakir Mohan University, Balasore, India and KNAR, Soonchunhyang University, Asan, Korea.
转录组学在保护敏感和经济重要物种中的作用
生物学的核心教条[DNA-(转录)---›RNA-(翻译)--›蛋白质]与从每个分子中获得的“组学”资源之间的联系现在正被保护管理者用来保护生物多样性和生态系统以实现可持续发展。生物多样性并不一定意味着物种的总数,它更复杂,包括物种内部的遗传多样性和栖息地的多样性。土地利用的变化、直接收获、各种形式的污染和气候变化是对生物多样性的最大威胁,其中大多数几乎没有在分子水平上记录下来,以指导保护行动和阻止物种灭绝。如果当前的分布范围受到干扰,证明物种适应性的可塑性可以确保在为物种迁移提出合适的栖息地方面做出明智的决定。“组学”资源(特别是由高通量RNA和DNA测序方法产生的)最近进行了更大规模的干预,以了解物种生理学、进化生物学和生态学。这支持了关于自然种群中适应性表型的进化和评估以及对各种环境扰动的生理反应机制的丰富信息(Alvarez等人,2015;De Wit等人,2015年;Evans,2015;Connon等人,2018)。转录组学可以在保护敏感和经济重要物种的背景下解开无与伦比的谜团。它比基因组和组织特异性更小,减少了生成的数据量,并专注于候选基因表达,了解物种对环境变化的反应。它通过从头组装的转录物生成和涉及预测基因功能的注释,为在分子水平上研究非模式物种的生物学提供了足够的空间。除了本体论和基于同源性的功能注释外,转录组还可以用于发现遗传标记,如简单序列重复序列(SSR)和单核苷酸多态性(SNPs),这对评估遗传多样性和探索新栖息地的物种至关重要。最终,这些资源应有效地纳入管理决策和政策,为保护做出贡献。由于管理者不熟悉复杂分子数据的解释,转录组知识在保护中的利用仍然很少见。因此,为了克服这种知识鸿沟,生理学家和数据科学家需要与监管机构和资源管理者建立伙伴关系,将转录组学评估转化为表征良好的分子阈值,这些阈值可以作为合理的标记,预测一个物种在调用导致恢复或不恢复的补偿机制时的适应性可塑性。除非设计出这种保守的基准,否则转录组在管理行动和政策中的效用似乎存在争议。在过去的八年里,作为一名研究人员,我一直与韩国濒危物种倡议有关。该倡议优先考虑了基于Illumina HiSeq的转录组生成短读平台和清洁读数从头组装的Trinity套件。此外,一个被称为PANM数据库(ProtostomeDB)的本地策划数据库促进了韩国濒临灭绝的红名单软体动物和蝴蝶物种的基因发现。大多数情况下,该倡议下采用的转录组学管道已经对物种的免疫、生长和繁殖背景下的功能资源进行了编目。从转录组中大规模筛选SSR标记突出了在受干扰的自然栖息地中解决物种丰富度和多样性的可能性,以及在较新的栖息地中寻找物种的可行性。该倡议提供了第一份记录濒危石首蝶(如Protantigius superans和Spindasis takanosis)和若虫蝶Fabriciana nerippe的生态相关特征的报告(Patnaik等人,2015;Hwang等人,2016)。此外,亚洲大黄蜂(Vespa mandarinia)的转录组图谱能够筛选新的基因,以了解在韩国被列为受威胁物种的黄蜂的生理特征(Patnaik等人,2016)。在韩国受威胁的软体动物物种中,陆生蜗牛,如车嘴海螺和quelpartensis海螺(Kang et al.,2016)、库罗达纳海螺(Koreanoharda kurodana)(Kang等人,2016),子宫颈沙螺(Kanget al.,2017)和中华埃罗比姆螺(Kang-et al.,2018)被优先用于转录组测序。还从韩国濒危的淡水贻贝Cristaria plicata(Patnaik et al.,2016)和呼吸空气的陆蛞蝓Incialia fruhstorferi(Patnaak et al.,2019)的转录组中筛选出了归因于先天免疫途径的详细分子组分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of environmental biology
Journal of environmental biology ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
92
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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