Transcriptome Analysis of the Octopus vulgaris Central Nervous System
Author(s) -
Zhang Xiang,
Yong Mao,
Zixia Huang,
Meng Qu,
Jun Chen,
Shaoxiong Ding,
Jingni Hong,
Tiantian Sun
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0040320
Subject(s) - biology , de novo transcriptome assembly , transcriptome , expressed sequence tag , contig , lymnaea stagnalis , genetics , computational biology , evolutionary biology , gene , genome , ecology , gene expression , snail
Background Cephalopoda are a class of Mollusca species found in all the world's oceans. They are an important model organism in neurobiology. Unfortunately, the lack of neuronal molecular sequences, such as ESTs, transcriptomic or genomic information, has limited the development of molecular neurobiology research in this unique model organism. Results With high-throughput Illumina Solexa sequencing technology, we have generated 59,859 high quality sequences from 12,918,391 paired-end reads. Using BLASTx/BLASTn, 12,227 contigs have blast hits in the Swissprot, NR protein database and NT nucleotide database with E-value cutoff 1e −5 . The comparison between the Octopus vulgaris central nervous system (CNS) library and the Aplysia californica / Lymnaea stagnalis CNS ESTs library yielded 5.93%/13.45% of O. vulgaris sequences with significant matches (1e −5 ) using BLASTn/tBLASTx. Meanwhile the hit percentage of the recently published Schistocerca gregaria , Tilapia or Hirudo medicinalis CNS library to the O. vulgaris CNS library is 21.03%–46.19%. We constructed the Phylogenetic tree using two genes related to CNS function, Synaptotagmin-7 and Synaptophysin. Lastly, we demonstrated that O. vulgaris may have a vertebrate-like Blood-Brain Barrier based on bioinformatic analysis. Conclusion This study provides a mass of molecular information that will contribute to further molecular biology research on O. vulgaris . In our presentation of the first CNS transcriptome analysis of O. vulgaris , we hope to accelerate the study of functional molecular neurobiology and comparative evolutionary biology.
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