Plectorhinchus chaetodonoides Lacepède, 1801 is a widespread multicolored sweetlips fish found in the Indo-West Pacific Ocean where its appearance and color patterns drastically change during growth. In this study, the whole mitochondrial genome of P. chaetodonoides was sequenced which revealed it is 16,546 bp long and contains 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, two ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, and one noncoding regulatory region. The GC content of the whole genome was 47.5% and 48.2%, 46.3%, 46.8%, 42.5% in the protein coding genes, tRNAs, rRNAs, and control regions, respectively. Molecular phylogenetic analysis resolved P. chaetodonoides as closely associated with Diagramma pictum and nested within a clade of Haemulidae that is allied with species from the Lutjanidae, Kyphosidae, Teraponidae, and Sciaenidae families. These results provide an essential genomic resource for future evolutionary and conservation studies of P. chaetodonoides as well as the Haemulidae family.
Pomadasys kaakan (Cuvier 1830) is a fish found in coastal waters that is widely distributed in the Western Indo-Pacific Ocean and plays an important role in commercial fisheries. The complete mitochondrial genome of P. kaakan was determined for the first time in this study. The genome was 16,808 bp in length and consisted of 13 protein coding genes, 22 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, two ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, and one noncoding control region. The overall base composition was estimated to be A: 27.1%; T: 24.7%; C: 31.7%; and G: 16.5%, with an AT bias of 51.8%. Molecular phylogenetic analysis suggested that P. kaakan was clustered with species of genera Plectorhinchus , Diagramma , and Parapristipoma , which also belonged to the Haemulidae family. Furthermore, the Haemulidae family was closely related to the group containing Oplegnathidae, Kyphosidae, Teraponidae, and Lutjanidae. These results may provide molecular information for the species evolution and phylogenetic status of P. kaakan in the suborder Percoidei.
Toll-like receptors 5 (TLR5), a member of the toll-like receptors (TLRs) family, is a class of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). It responds to vertebrate recognition of bacterial flagellin and participates in innate immune responses. However, genome-wide identification and characterization of TLR5 in fishes have not been investigated. Here, three TLR5M isotypes (TLR5Ma, TLR5Mb1, and TLR5Mb2) and a TLR5S are all extracted from fish genomes on the basis of phylogenetic and synteny analyses. We confirmed that the non-teleost fishes have one TLR5M gene, as well as additional TLR5 genes (TLR5M and TLR5S) in teleost fishes. In addition, some special teleost fishes possess two to three TLR5 genes, which have undergone the fourth whole-genome duplication (WGD). According to our results, we inferred that the diversity of TLR5 genes in fishes seems to be the result of combinations of WGD and gene loss. Furthermore, TLR5 isoforms displayed differences at the flagellin interaction sites and viral binding sites, and showed lineage-specific, which indicated that TLR5 duplicates may generate functional divergence. Bacterial experiments also supported the idea that CiTLR5Ma and CiTLR5Mb are subfunctionalized to sense bacterial flagellin. In summary, our present comparative genomic survey will benefit for further functional investigations of TLR5 genes in fish.
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