Closely related, yet phenotypically different - Genome assemblies of two sister species of widow spiders: Latrodectus hasselti and L. katipo, Theridiidae
Ivanov, V.; Uludag, K. O.; Schöneberg, Y.; Schneider, J. M.; Kennedy, S.; Hamadou, A. B.; Vink, C. J.; Krehenwinkel, H.
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Widow spiders of the genus Latrodectus are important animals for biomedical, pest and conservation research. Here, we present the assembled genomes of two closely related Latrodectus species: the Australian L. hasselti and the New Zealand endemic L. katipo. The genome of L. katipo consists of 13 scaffolds likely corresponding to chromosomes (90% of the total length) and 1267 short scaffolds (10%). It has a total length of 1.5 Gbp and BUSCO of 94.9%. The genome of L. hasselti consists of 379 scaffolds and has a total length of 1.7 Gbp and a BUSCO score of 95.4%. The repeat content is very similar in both genomes with a total proportion of 37.2% for L. katipo and 39.9% for L. hasselti. Genome annotation predicted 12706 and 15111 genes for L. katipo and L. hasselti respectively. An ortholog analysis shows large overlap between orthogroups suggesting either duplication events in L. hasselti or loss of genes in L. katipo.
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