4.6 Article

The eyestalk transcriptome of red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii

Journal

GENE
Volume 557, Issue 1, Pages 28-34

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2014.12.001

Keywords

Procambarus clarkii; Red swamp crayfish; Transcriptome; Eyestalk; Illumina sequencing; Neuroendocrinology; Vision

Funding

  1. European Project [LIFE10 NAT/IT/000239 RARITY]
  2. PRIN (Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research) [2010-2011 20109XZEPR_002]

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The red swamp crayfish (Procambanis clarkii, Girard 1852) is among the most economically important freshwater crustacean species, and it is also considered one of the most aggressive invasive species worldwide. Despite its commercial importance and being one of the most studied crayfish species, its genomic and transcriptomic layout has only been partially studied. Illumina RNA-sequencing was applied to characterize the eyestalk transcriptome and identify its most characterizing genes. A collection of 83,170,732 reads from eyestalks was obtained using Illumina paired-end sequencing technology. A de nova assembly was performed with the Trinity assembly software generating 119,255 contigs (average length of 1007 bp) and identifying the first sequenced transcriptome in this species. The eyestalk is a major site for the production of neurohormones and controls a variety of physiological functions such as osmotic regulation, molting, epidermal color patterns and reproduction. Hence, its transcriptomic characterization is interesting and potentially instrumental to the elucidation of genes which have not been comprehensively described yet. Moreover, the availability of such a large amount of information supported the characterization of molecular families which have never been described before. The P. clarkii eyestalk transcriptome reported here provides a resource for improving the knowledge of the still incompletely defined neuroendocrinology of this species and represents an important source of data for all the interested carcinologists. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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