The Draft Genome of Ciona intestinalis : Insights into Chordate and Vertebrate Origins
Joint Genome Institute · Kyoto University · +25 more institutions
Abstract
The first chordates appear in the fossil record at the time of the Cambrian explosion, nearly 550 million years ago. The modern ascidian tadpole represents a plausible approximation to these ancestral chordates. To illuminate the origins of chordate and vertebrates, we generated a draft of the protein-coding portion of the genome of the most studied ascidian, Ciona intestinalis . The Ciona genome contains ∼16,000 protein-coding genes, similar to the number in other invertebrates, but only half that found in vertebrates. Vertebrate gene families are typically found in simplified form in Ciona , suggesting that ascidians contain the basic ancestral complement of genes involved in cell signaling and development.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 130.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
87Topics & keywords
- Ciona intestinalis
- Chordate
- Ciona
- Biology
- Vertebrate
- Genome
- Evolutionary biology
- Lineage (genetic)