@article{fa8eaef266804ff68063d5cfd9c6f1eb,
title = "Comprehensive Transcriptome Sequencing of Tanaidacea with Proteomic Evidences for Their Silk",
abstract = "Tanaidaceans are small benthic crustaceans that mainly inhabit diverse marine environments, and they comprise one of the most diverse and abundant macrofaunal groups in the deep sea. Tanaidacea is one of the most thread-dependent taxa in the Crustacea, constructing tubes, spun with their silk, for shelter. In this work, we sequenced and assembled the comprehensive transcriptome of 23 tanaidaceans encompassing 14 families and 4 superfamilies of Tanaidacea, and performed silk proteomics of Zeuxo ezoensis to search for its silk genes. As a result, we identified two families of silk proteins that are conserved across the four superfamilies. The long and repetitive nature of these silk genes resembles that of other silk-producing organisms, and the two families of proteins are similar in composition to silkworm and caddisworm fibroins, respectively. Moreover, the amino acid composition of the repetitive motifs of tanaidacean silk tends to be more hydrophilic, and therefore could be a useful resource in studying their unique adaptation of silk use in a marine environment. The availability of comprehensive transcriptome data in these taxa, coupled with proteomic evidence of their silk genes, will facilitate evolutionary and ecological studies.",
keywords = "phylogenomics, proteome, silk, tanaidaceans, transcriptome",
author = "Keiichi Kakui and Fleming, {James F.} and Masaru Mori and Yoshihiro Fujiwara and Kazuharu Arakawa",
note = "Funding Information: The authors are grateful to Yuki Takai (Keio University, KU) and Sumiko Ohnuma (KU) for experimental support; Ken Fujimoto (National Research Institute of Fisheries Science, NRIFS), Jun Hashimoto (Nagasaki University, NU), Hideki Kaeriyama (NRIFS), Hisanori Kohtsuka (The University of Tokyo, UT), Hiroaki Nakano (University of Tsukuba), Shouzo Ogiso (Kanazawa University, KaU), and Michitaka Shimomura (Kyoto University, KyU) for the opportunity to join research cruises and joint surveys; the captains and crews of R/V Aosagi (KaU), R/V Mirai (JAMSTEC), TR/V Nagasaki-maru (NU), R/V Rinkai-maru (UT), TR/V Seisui-maru (Mie University), R/V Soyomaru (NRIFS), and R/V Tansei-maru (JAMSTEC), and technicians and researchers on board for support during cruises; Shinta Fujimoto (Tohoku University), Futoshi Kakizoe (Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium, PNPA), Hinako Katsushima (Hokkaido University, HU), Hisanori Kohtsuka (UT), Tsuyoshi Matsuda (PNPA), Akira Ogushi (PNPA), Susumu Ohtsuka (Hiroshima University), Koji Shibazaki (HU), Takako Suzuki (Yokohama Hakkeijima Sea Paradise), and the Japanese Association for Marine Biology (JAMBIO) Coastal Organism Joint Survey for contributing specimens; Hinako Katsushima (HU), Nobuya Okamoto (HU), Akari Sato (HU), and Michitaka Shimomura (KyU) for help in identification of some specimens; and Atsushi C Suzuki (KU) for inspiring and encouraging this project. This study is an outcome of the following project directed by Y.F.: “Aleutian Magic” observations in the south-eastern Bering Sea. This research was supported by research funds from The Yamagata Prefectural Government and Tsuruoka City, KAKENHI grants JP10J01119, JP16K18597, JP16H04611, and JP19K06800 from The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS), research funds from JAMBIO, and research funds from The Research Institute of Marine Invertebrates Foundation. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/gbe/evab281",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Genome biology and evolution",
issn = "1759-6653",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "12",
}