Genome Assemblies for Chromosomal Evolution Analyses of Marsupials

Patrick G.S. Grady from the University of Connecticut presented at London Calling 2023 a session entitled: “Unraveling chromosomal evolution in marsupials: comparative genomics and methylomics with telomere-to-telomere precision.” Grady spoke about the use of marsupials as a model. They have pentapedal locomotion, unique reproduction, and dynamic forms of cancer. Their genome scan be studied with long-read sequencing to compare marsupials.The genomic diversity complements the phenotypic diversity, said Grady, yet there are “wildly different evolutionary rates.” Grady spoke about the evolution of ultra-long read sequencing and now with two flow cells plus chromatin info marsupial genomes can be generated. With a Q score of 23 and an N50 of 161 kb, the team uses one LSK v14 PromethION flow cell and one 1 ULK v 114 run. Grady shared a table of assembly statistics with wallaby and other marsupials. Comparisons of genomes seem to indicate differences in the centromeres. A “stained glass plot” compared linear composition and epigenetics of genome features. Grady thinks there is a simple repeat that has caused these fusions. In some places this is a centromere and in some places it isn’t. With complete assemblies, the team is able to map more data to the Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) assemblies and identify sequences and features. Comparative genomes at this resolution is possible thanks to the PromethION sequence datasets. I thought it was interesting to learn how Grady mapped sequences using FISH too. Grady assembled with Flye and Verkko assemblers using samples from males and females from each species.

brown kangaroo lying on ground
How did genome sequencing and assembly of marsupials identify unique chromosomal evolutionary features? Photo by Karen Lau00e5rk Boshoff on Pexels.com