Abstract
Charybdis japonica predominantly inhabits the intertidal zones
and has high desiccation tolerance. We present the first
chromosome-level C. japonica genome, which contains 51
chromosomes, and the revised genome is 1431.02 Mb in length and has a
contig N50 size of 29.67 Mb. Among the contigs, 91.42% were anchored to
51 chromosomes. Additionally, 824.02 Mb repeat elements, 30,900 coding
genes, 474 miRNAs, 15,570 tRNAs, 309 rRNAs, and 157 miRNAs were
identified in the C. japonica genome. The whole-genome
resequencing data can contribute to the identification of sex-related
single-nucleotide polymorphisms and insertion–deletion mutations. The
0-10,120,000 bp of chromosome 37 is the sex-determining region of
C. japonica. Comparative genome analysis identified 1,138
C. japonica-specific gene families. Phylogenetic analysis showed
that C. japonica has a close relationship with Portunus
trituberculatus, which also belonged to family Portunidae, and
differentiated 42.1-135.5 million years ago. Demographic history
analysis suggested that the maximum effective population size of
C. japonica was maintained until 0.5×105 years ago. Relative
evolution rate showed that C. japonica evolved slower than
Daphnia magna, Penaeus vannamei, and P.
trituberculatus. Compared with other species, metabolism rate, oxygen
supply, oxidative stress, and various transporter-related genes were
expanded or underwent positive selection in C. japonica, which
might contribute to C. japonica’s ability to overcome diverse
stresses in drought environment. Decoding the present genome provides
valuable information for revealing the desiccation-adaptive and
sex-determining mechanisms of C. japonica and also enriches the
genetic information to explore the evolutionary history and
environmental adaptation strategies of other Portunidae crabs.