Teaching transposon classification as a means to crowd source the curation of repeat annotation : a tardigrade perspective
Abstract
Background
The advancement of sequencing technologies results in the rapid release of hundreds of new genome assemblies a year providing unprecedented resources for the study of genome evolution. Within this context, the significance of in-depth analyses of repetitive elements, transposable elements (TEs) in particular, is increasingly recognized in understanding genome evolution. Despite the plethora of available bioinformatic tools for identifying and annotating TEs, the phylogenetic distance of the target species from a curated and classified database of repetitive element sequences constrains any automated annotation effort. Moreover, manual curation of raw repeat libraries is deemed essential due to the frequent incompleteness of automatically generated consensus sequences.
Results
Here, we present an example of a crowd-sourcing effort aimed at curating and annotating TE libraries of two non-model species built around a collaborative, peer-reviewed teaching process. Manual curation and classification are time-consuming processes that offer limited short-term academic rewards and are typically confined to a few research groups where methods are taught through hands-on experience. Crowd-sourcing efforts could therefore offer a significant opportunity to bridge the gap between learning the methods of curation effectively and empowering the scientific community with high-quality, reusable repeat libraries.
Conclusions
The collaborative manual curation of TEs from two tardigrade species, for which there were no TE libraries available, resulted in the successful characterization of hundreds of new and diverse TEs in a reasonable time frame. Our crowd-sourcing setting can be used as a teaching reference guide for similar projects: A hidden treasure awaits discovery within non-model organisms.
Main Authors
Format
Articles
Research article
Published
2024
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
BioMed Central
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202405223807Use this for linking
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1759-8753
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13100-024-00319-8
Language
English
Published in
Mobile DNA
Citation
- Peona, V., Martelossi, J., Almojil, D., Bocharkina, J., Brännström, I., Brown, M., Cang, A., Carrasco-Valenzuela, T., DeVries, J., Doellman, M., Elsner, D., Espíndola-Hernández, P., Montoya, G. F., Gaspar, B., Zagorski, D., Hałakuc, P., Ivanovska, B., Laumer, C., Lehmann, R., . . . Suh, A. (2024). Teaching transposon classification as a means to crowd source the curation of repeat annotation : a tardigrade perspective. Mobile DNA, 15, Article 10. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13100-024-00319-8
Additional information about funding
Open access funding provided by Uppsala University. This study was supported by grants from Swedish Research Council Vetenskapsrådet (2020–04436 to AS; 2022–06195 to VP), the Swedish Research Council Formas (2017 − 01597 to AS), the Canziani bequest and the ‘Ricerca Fondamentale Orientata’ (RFO) funding from the University of Bologna to JM.
Copyright© 2024 the Authors