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Dryad

Data from: Understanding the genomic basis of adaptive response to variable osmotic niches in freshwater prawns: a comparative intraspecific RNA-Seq analysis of Macrobrachium australiense

Cite this dataset

Moshtaghi, Azam; Rahi, Md Lifat; Mather, Peter B.; Hurwood, David A. (2017). Data from: Understanding the genomic basis of adaptive response to variable osmotic niches in freshwater prawns: a comparative intraspecific RNA-Seq analysis of Macrobrachium australiense [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m0q5s

Abstract

Understanding the molecular basis of adaptive response to variable environmental conditions is a central goal of evolutionary biology. Here we sought to identify potential outlier SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) in three wild populations of a freshwater prawn (Macrobrachium australiense) that are exposed to differing osmotic niches by using a comparative transcriptomics approach. De novo assembly of approximately 542 million (75 nt) pair end reads collected from 10 individuals revealed 123,396 longer contigs/transcripts of variable length, that showed 97.38% transcriptome assembly completeness. Differential gene expression (DGE) analysis of major osmoregulatory genes revealed that Calreticulin, Na+/H+ exchanger and V-type (H+) ATPase showed the highest expression levels in the Blunder Creek (low ionic) population, while Crustacean cardiovascular peptide (CCP), Na+/K+-ATPase, Na+/K+/2Cl- Co-transporter (NKCC) and Na+/HCO3 exchanger showed the highest expression levels in the Bulimba Creek (higher ionic) population. In total, 16 gene ontology (GO) term categories were functionally enriched among the three studied populations. We identified 4144 raw and 835 high quality filtered SNPs in the three M. australiense populations, of which 84 SNPs were identified as outliers. Outliers were detected in 4 important osmoregulatory genes that include: Calreticulin, Na+/H+ exchanger, Na+/K+-ATPase and V-type-(H+)-ATPase. All outliers in the osmoregulatory genes were located in non-coding regulatory regions (untranslated regions, UTRs) of the gene. We hypothesize that the outlier SNPs identified here in M. australiense populations exposed naturally to different osmotic conditions influence specific gene expression patterns that allow individuals to respond to local environmental conditions.

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