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A systematically improved high quality genome and transcriptome of the human blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni

  • Anna V. Protasio
  • , Isheng J. Tsai
  • , Anne Babbage
  • , Sarah Nichol
  • , Martin Hunt
  • , Martin A. Aslett
  • , Nishadi de Silva
  • , Giles S. Velarde
  • , Tim J.C. Anderson
  • , Richard C. Clark
  • , Claire Davidson
  • , Gary P. Dillon
  • , Nancy E. Holroyd
  • , Philip T. LoVerde
  • , Christine Lloyd
  • , Jacquelline McQuillan
  • , Guilherme Oliveira
  • , Thomas D. Otto
  • , Sophia J. Parker-Manuel
  • , Michael A. Quail
  • R. Alan Wilson, Adhemar Zerlotini, David W. Dunne, Matthew Berriman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

352 Scopus citations

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is one of the most prevalent parasitic diseases, affecting millions of people in developing countries. Amongst the human-infective species, Schistosoma mansoni is also the most commonly used in the laboratory and here we present the systematic improvement of its draft genome. We used Sanger capillary and deep-coverage Illumina sequencing from clonal worms to upgrade the highly fragmented draft 380 Mb genome to one with only 885 scaffolds and more than 81% of the bases organised into chromosomes. We have also used transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) from four time points in the parasite's life cycle to refine gene predictions and profile their expression. More than 45% of predicted genes have been extensively modified and the total number has been reduced from 11,807 to 10,852. Using the new version of the genome, we identified trans-splicing events occurring in at least 11% of genes and identified clear cases where it is used to resolve polycistronic transcripts. We have produced a high-resolution map of temporal changes in expression for 9,535 genes, covering an unprecedented dynamic range for this organism. All of these data have been consolidated into a searchable format within the GeneDB (www.genedb.org) and SchistoDB (www.schistodb.net) databases. With further transcriptional profiling and genome sequencing increasingly accessible, the upgraded genome will form a fundamental dataset to underpin further advances in schistosome research.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1455
JournalPLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2012

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