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ERGA-BGE reference genomes of Hyalomma lusitanicum and its obligate Francisella endosymbiont as a genomic resource for One Health research

Key Points

Hyalomma lusitanicum is a characteristic tick species of the western Mediterranean region, with a well-established distribution across the Iberian Peninsula. It is strongly associated with wild ungulates, particularly red deer, as well as livestock, to which it can transmit a wide range of pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, and protozoa. Here, we present three genomic resources for H. lusitanicum: a scaffold-scale nuclear genome, the complete mitochondrial genome, and the complete...

Hyalomma lusitanicum is a characteristic tick species of the western Mediterranean region, with a well-established distribution across the Iberian Peninsula. It is strongly associated with wild ungulates, particularly red deer, as well as livestock, to which it can transmit a wide range of pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, and protozoa. Here, we present three genomic resources for H. lusitanicum: a scaffold-scale nuclear genome, the complete mitochondrial genome, and the complete genome of its associated Francisella bacterial endosymbiont. The nuclear genome assembly spans 1.81 Gb and comprises 59 scaffolds, with a scaffold N50 of 153.6 Mb (L50 = 5) and no gaps, indicating high contiguity and completeness with a gene annotation completeness BUSCO score of 97.1 %. Genome annotation of the nuclear assembly identified 20,638 protein-coding genes, 1,422 non-coding genes, and 5,775 pseudogenes. A total of 18 scaffolds were assembled as putative chromosomes, exceeding the 11 chromosomes inferred as ancestral; however, synteny analyses suggest that several scaffolds likely represent fragmented portions of the same chromosome, probably due to incomplete Hi-C scaffolding. Despite this, the assembly represents one of the most complete tick nuclear genomes generated to date. In addition, we report the complete genome of a Francisella endosymbiont (1.51 Mb, 1,679 genes), characterized by a high proportion of pseudogenes and reduced genome size, consistent with patterns of genome reduction associated with obligate symbiosis. Together, these genomic resources provide a framework to investigate local adaptation and host-symbiont evolution, and to support improved surveillance, control, and management strategies for species of public health relevance.
ERGA (ORG) Hyalomma (LOCATION) Francisella (PERSON) Hyalomma lusitanicum (PERSON) Mediterranean (LOCATION) the Iberian Peninsula (LOCATION) Gb (LOCATION) BUSCO (ORG) Mb (ORG)
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