Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)

Rodents of the genus Peromyscus have become increasingly utilized models for investigations into adaptive biology. This genus is particularly powerful for research linking genetics with adaptive physiology or behaviors, and recent research has capitalized on the unique opportunities afforded by the...

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Main Authors: Lauren L. Kordonowy, Matthew D. MacManes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2016-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/2617.pdf
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spelling doaj-02779ed2368a4edfa08ae5eabf4b5eed2020-11-25T00:19:09ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592016-10-014e261710.7717/peerj.2617Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)Lauren L. Kordonowy0Matthew D. MacManes1Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, United StatesDepartment of Molecular, Cellular, and Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, United StatesRodents of the genus Peromyscus have become increasingly utilized models for investigations into adaptive biology. This genus is particularly powerful for research linking genetics with adaptive physiology or behaviors, and recent research has capitalized on the unique opportunities afforded by the ecological diversity of these rodents. Well characterized genomic and transcriptomic data is intrinsic to explorations of the genetic architecture responsible for ecological adaptations. Therefore, this study characterizes the transcriptome of three male reproductive tissues (testes, epididymis and vas deferens) of Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse), a desert specialist. The transcriptome assembly process was optimized in order to produce a high quality and substantially complete annotated transcriptome. This composite transcriptome was generated to characterize the expressed transcripts in the male reproductive tract of P. eremicus, which will serve as a crucial resource for future research investigating our hypothesis that the male Cactus mouse possesses an adaptive reproductive phenotype to mitigate water-loss from ejaculate. This study reports genes under positive selection in the male Cactus mouse reproductive transcriptome relative to transcriptomes from Peromyscus maniculatus (deer mouse) and Mus musculus. Thus, this study expands upon existing genetic research in this species, and we provide a high quality transcriptome to enable further explorations of our proposed hypothesis for male Cactus mouse reproductive adaptations to minimize seminal fluid loss.https://peerj.com/articles/2617.pdfPeromyscus eremicusTranscriptomeGenomicsBioinformaticsAdaptationDesert physiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren L. Kordonowy
Matthew D. MacManes
spellingShingle Lauren L. Kordonowy
Matthew D. MacManes
Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
PeerJ
Peromyscus eremicus
Transcriptome
Genomics
Bioinformatics
Adaptation
Desert physiology
author_facet Lauren L. Kordonowy
Matthew D. MacManes
author_sort Lauren L. Kordonowy
title Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
title_short Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
title_full Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
title_fullStr Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse)
title_sort characterization of a male reproductive transcriptome for peromyscus eremicus (cactus mouse)
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Rodents of the genus Peromyscus have become increasingly utilized models for investigations into adaptive biology. This genus is particularly powerful for research linking genetics with adaptive physiology or behaviors, and recent research has capitalized on the unique opportunities afforded by the ecological diversity of these rodents. Well characterized genomic and transcriptomic data is intrinsic to explorations of the genetic architecture responsible for ecological adaptations. Therefore, this study characterizes the transcriptome of three male reproductive tissues (testes, epididymis and vas deferens) of Peromyscus eremicus (Cactus mouse), a desert specialist. The transcriptome assembly process was optimized in order to produce a high quality and substantially complete annotated transcriptome. This composite transcriptome was generated to characterize the expressed transcripts in the male reproductive tract of P. eremicus, which will serve as a crucial resource for future research investigating our hypothesis that the male Cactus mouse possesses an adaptive reproductive phenotype to mitigate water-loss from ejaculate. This study reports genes under positive selection in the male Cactus mouse reproductive transcriptome relative to transcriptomes from Peromyscus maniculatus (deer mouse) and Mus musculus. Thus, this study expands upon existing genetic research in this species, and we provide a high quality transcriptome to enable further explorations of our proposed hypothesis for male Cactus mouse reproductive adaptations to minimize seminal fluid loss.
topic Peromyscus eremicus
Transcriptome
Genomics
Bioinformatics
Adaptation
Desert physiology
url https://peerj.com/articles/2617.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT laurenlkordonowy characterizationofamalereproductivetranscriptomeforperomyscuseremicuscactusmouse
AT matthewdmacmanes characterizationofamalereproductivetranscriptomeforperomyscuseremicuscactusmouse
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