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The genome of Nautilus pompilius illuminates eye evolution and biomineralization.

Yang ZhangFan MaoHuawei MuMinwei HuangYongbo BaoLili WangNai-Kei WongShu XiaoHe DaiZhiming XiangMingli MaYuanyan XiongZiwei ZhangLvping ZhangXiaoyuan SongFan WangXiyu MuJun LiHaitao MaYuehuan ZhangHongkun ZhengOleg SimakovZiniu Yu
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2021)
Nautilus is the sole surviving externally shelled cephalopod from the Palaeozoic. It is unique within cephalopod genealogy and critical to understanding the evolutionary novelties of cephalopods. Here, we present a complete Nautilus pompilius genome as a fundamental genomic reference on cephalopod innovations, such as the pinhole eye and biomineralization. Nautilus shows a compact, minimalist genome with few encoding genes and slow evolutionary rates in both non-coding and coding regions among known cephalopods. Importantly, multiple genomic innovations including gene losses, independent contraction and expansion of specific gene families and their associated regulatory networks likely moulded the evolution of the nautilus pinhole eye. The conserved molluscan biomineralization toolkit and lineage-specific repetitive low-complexity domains are essential to the construction of the nautilus shell. The nautilus genome constitutes a valuable resource for reconstructing the evolutionary scenarios and genomic innovations that shape the extant cephalopods.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • transcription factor
  • climate change
  • genome wide identification
  • high frequency