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Genome assembly of the southern pine beetle ( Dendroctonus frontalis Zimmerman) reveals the origins of gene content reduction in Dendroctonus .

Megan CopelandShelby LandaNikolaos VakirlisMichelle M JonikaJamie AlfieriTerrence SylvesterZachary HooverCarl E HjelmenJ Spencer JohnstonBethany R KyreLynne K RieskeHeath BlackmonClaudio Casola
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Dendroctonus frontalis , also known as southern pine beetle (SPB), represents the most damaging forest pest in the southeastern United States. Strategies to predict, monitor and suppress SPB outbreaks have had limited success. Genomic data are critical to inform on pest biology and to identify molecular targets to develop improved management approaches. Here, we produced a chromosome-level genome assembly of SPB using long-read sequencing data. Synteny analyses confirmed the conservation of the core coleopteran Stevens elements and validated the bona fide SPB X chromosome. Transcriptomic data were used to obtain 39,588 transcripts corresponding to 13,354 putative protein-coding loci. Comparative analyses of gene content across 14 beetle and 3 other insects revealed several losses of conserved genes in the Dendroctonus clade and gene gains in SPB and Dendroctonus that were enriched for loci encoding membrane proteins and extracellular matrix proteins. While lineage-specific gene losses contributed to the gene content reduction observed in Dendroctonus , we also showed that widespread misannotation of transposable elements represents a major cause of the apparent gene expansion in several non- Dendroctonus species. Our findings uncovered distinctive features of the SPB gene complement and disentangled the role of biological and annotation-related factors contributing to gene content variation across beetles.
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