两栖动物基因组学联合会:为两栖动物研究和保护推进基因组和遗传资源。

IF 3.5 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Tiffany A Kosch, María Torres-Sánchez, H Christoph Liedtke, Kyle Summers, Maximina H Yun, Andrew J Crawford, Simon T Maddock, Md Sabbir Ahammed, Victor L N Araújo, Lorenzo V Bertola, Gary M Bucciarelli, Albert Carné, Céline M Carneiro, Kin O Chan, Ying Chen, Angelica Crottini, Jessica M da Silva, Robert D Denton, Carolin Dittrich, Gonçalo Espregueira Themudo, Katherine A Farquharson, Natalie J Forsdick, Edward Gilbert, Jing Che, Barbara A Katzenback, Ramachandran Kotharambath, Nicholas A Levis, Roberto Márquez, Glib Mazepa, Kevin P Mulder, Hendrik Müller, Mary J O'Connell, Pablo Orozco-terWengel, Gemma Palomar, Alice Petzold, David W Pfennig, Karin S Pfennig, Michael S Reichert, Jacques Robert, Mark D Scherz, Karen Siu-Ting, Anthony A Snead, Matthias Stöck, Adam M M Stuckert, Jennifer L Stynoski, Rebecca D Tarvin, Katharina C Wollenberg Valero
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引用次数: 0

摘要

两栖动物是四足动物中的一个多样化类群,其三个系统目和科之间的分化时间较长。通过基因组学的视角研究两栖动物生物学,可以加深我们对这一动物类别和其他陆生脊椎动物特征的了解。由于两栖动物面临的威胁越来越大,我们对两栖动物基因组资源的需求比以往任何时候都更加迫切。两栖动物是最濒危的分类群之一,由于栖息地丧失、土地使用模式改变、疾病、气候变化及其协同效应,约有 41% 的物种濒临灭绝。两栖动物基因组资源使人们能够更好地了解其本体多样性、组织再生、不同的生活史和繁殖模式、抗捕食者策略以及恢复力和适应性反应。它们还是研究广泛基因组特征(如进化基因组扩展和收缩)的重要模型,因为在所有动物分类群中,它们的基因组大小范围最广,并拥有多种遗传性别决定机制。尽管有这些特点,两栖类动物的基因组测序工作却明显落后于其他脊椎动物,主要原因是组装两栖类动物庞大、重复丰富的基因组所面临的挑战,以及相对缺乏社会支持。长读数测序技术的出现,再加上先进的分子和计算技术,改善了脚手架结构,减少了计算工作量,使解决其中一些难题成为可能。为了通过国际协调与合作促进和加快两栖动物基因组学研究的生产和使用,我们于2023年初发起了两栖动物基因组学联盟(AGC,https://mvs.unimelb.edu.au/amphibian-genomics-consortium )。这个新兴社区已经拥有来自 41 个国家的 282 多名成员。两栖动物基因组学联盟旨在利用其成员的不同能力来推动两栖动物基因组资源的发展,并缩小生物学家、生物信息学家和保护工作者之间的实施差距。在此,我们对两栖动物基因组学领域的现状进行了评估,重点介绍了以往的研究,提出了需要克服的挑战,并呼吁研究界和保护界作为 AGC 的一部分团结起来,使两栖动物基因组学研究 "飞跃 "到新的水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Amphibian Genomics Consortium: advancing genomic and genetic resources for amphibian research and conservation.

Amphibians represent a diverse group of tetrapods, marked by deep divergence times between their three systematic orders and families. Studying amphibian biology through the genomics lens increases our understanding of the features of this animal class and that of other terrestrial vertebrates. The need for amphibian genomic resources is more urgent than ever due to the increasing threats to this group. Amphibians are one of the most imperiled taxonomic groups, with approximately 41% of species threatened with extinction due to habitat loss, changes in land use patterns, disease, climate change, and their synergistic effects. Amphibian genomic resources have provided a better understanding of ontogenetic diversity, tissue regeneration, diverse life history and reproductive modes, anti-predator strategies, and resilience and adaptive responses. They also serve as essential models for studying broad genomic traits, such as evolutionary genome expansions and contractions, as they exhibit the widest range of genome sizes among all animal taxa and possess multiple mechanisms of genetic sex determination. Despite these features, genome sequencing of amphibians has significantly lagged behind that of other vertebrates, primarily due to the challenges of assembling their large, repeat-rich genomes and the relative lack of societal support. The emergence of long-read sequencing technologies, combined with advanced molecular and computational techniques that improve scaffolding and reduce computational workloads, is now making it possible to address some of these challenges. To promote and accelerate the production and use of amphibian genomics research through international coordination and collaboration, we launched the Amphibian Genomics Consortium (AGC, https://mvs.unimelb.edu.au/amphibian-genomics-consortium ) in early 2023. This burgeoning community already has more than 282 members from 41 countries. The AGC aims to leverage the diverse capabilities of its members to advance genomic resources for amphibians and bridge the implementation gap between biologists, bioinformaticians, and conservation practitioners. Here we evaluate the state of the field of amphibian genomics, highlight previous studies, present challenges to overcome, and call on the research and conservation communities to unite as part of the AGC to enable amphibian genomics research to "leap" to the next level.

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来源期刊
BMC Genomics
BMC Genomics 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
4.50%
发文量
769
审稿时长
6.4 months
期刊介绍: BMC Genomics is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of genome-scale analysis, functional genomics, and proteomics. BMC Genomics is part of the BMC series which publishes subject-specific journals focused on the needs of individual research communities across all areas of biology and medicine. We offer an efficient, fair and friendly peer review service, and are committed to publishing all sound science, provided that there is some advance in knowledge presented by the work.
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