The amphioxus genome and the evolution of the chordate karyotype

Nicholas H. Putnam(Joint Genome Institute), Thomas Butts(University of Oxford), David Ferrier(University of St Andrews), Rebecca F. Furlong(University of Oxford), Uffe Hellsten(Joint Genome Institute), Takeshi Kawashima(Washington University in St. Louis), Marc Robinson‐Rechavi(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Eiichi Shoguchi(Washington University in St. Louis), Astrid Terry(Joint Genome Institute), Jr‐Kai Yu(California Institute of Technology), E`lia Benito-Gutiérrez, Inna Dubchak(Joint Genome Institute), Jordi García‐Fernàndez(Universitat de Barcelona), Jeremy J. Gibson-Brown(Washington University in St. Louis), Igor V. Grigoriev(Joint Genome Institute), Amy C. Horton(Washington University in St. Louis), Pieter J. de Jong, Jerzy Jurka(Genetic Information Research Institute), Vladimir V. Kapitonov(Genetic Information Research Institute), Yuji Kohara(National Institute of Genetics), Yoko Kuroki(RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences), Erika Lindquist(Joint Genome Institute), Susan Lucas(Joint Genome Institute), Kazutoyo Osoegawa, L Pennacchio(Joint Genome Institute), Asaf A. Salamov(Joint Genome Institute), Yutaka Satou(Kyoto University), Tatjana Sauka‐Spengler(California Institute of Technology), Jeremy Schmutz, Tadasu Shin‐I(National Institute of Genetics), Atsushi Toyoda(RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences), Marianne Bronner‐Fraser(California Institute of Technology), Asao Fujiyama(National Institute of Informatics), Linda Z. Holland(Scripps Institution of Oceanography), Peter W. H. Holland(University of Oxford), Nori Satoh(Washington University in St. Louis), Daniel S. Rokhsar(Joint Genome Institute)
Nature
June 1, 2008
Cited by 1,610Open Access
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Abstract

Lancelets (‘amphioxus’) are the modern survivors of an ancient chordate lineage, with a fossil record dating back to the Cambrian period. Here we describe the structure and gene content of the highly polymorphic ∼520-megabase genome of the Florida lancelet Branchiostoma floridae, and analyse it in the context of chordate evolution. Whole-genome comparisons illuminate the murky relationships among the three chordate groups (tunicates, lancelets and vertebrates), and allow not only reconstruction of the gene complement of the last common chordate ancestor but also partial reconstruction of its genomic organization, as well as a description of two genome-wide duplications and subsequent reorganizations in the vertebrate lineage. These genome-scale events shaped the vertebrate genome and provided additional genetic variation for exploitation during vertebrate evolution. This issue sees the publication of the draft genome sequence of an animal that has been studied by biologists for many years as a model for a primitive chordate. The amphioxus or lancelet is a small worm-like creature, usually to be found buried in sand on the sea floor. Comparative analysis of the genome of the Florida lancelet, Branchiostoma floridae, reveals 17 ancestral chordate linkage groups conserved in the modern amphioxus and vertebrate genomes despite more than half a billion years of independent evolution. From this it possible to make a virtual reconstruction of the 17 chromosomes of the last common chordate ancestor. This reconstruction conforms that two rounds of whole genome duplication have occurred during evolution of the jawed vertebrate lineage. And it illuminates the murky relationships between the three chordate groups, the tunicates, lancelets and vertebrates. The cover shows four adult amphioxus collected in Apalachee Bay, Florida, with anterior towards the top and dorsal to the right. Yellow ovals are gonads. (Photo by Nicholas Putnam, DOE Joint Genome Institute.


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