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Chromosome‐scale genome assembly of areca palm ( Areca catechu )

Authors :
Zhangyan Wu
Chunyan Xu
Jing Li
Zhu Hui
Liyun Huang
Lan Qi
Mumtaz Ali Saand
Haixin Chen
Haikou Fan
Huanqi Zhou
Yi Wu
Yaodong Yang
Jia Li
Liyun Liu
W.-Q. Qin
Tao Fu
Source :
Molecular Ecology Resources. 21:2504-2519
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Areca palm (Areca catechu L.; family Arecaceae) is an important tropical medicinal crop and is also used for masticatory and religious purposes in Asia. Improvements to areca properties made by traditional breeding tools have been very slow, and further advances in its cultivation and practical use require genomic information, which is still unavailable. Here, we present a chromosome-scale reference genome assembly for areca by combining Illumina and PacBio data with Hi-C mapping technologies, covering the predicted A. catechu genome length (2.59 Gb, variety "Reyan#1") to an estimated 240× read depth. The assembly was 2.51 Gb in length with a scaffold N50 of 1.7Mb. The scaffolds were then further assembled into 16 pseudochromosomes, with an N50 of 172 Mb. Transposable elements comprised 80.37% of the areca genome, and 68.68% of them were long-terminal repeat retrotransposon elements. The areca palm genome was predicted to harbour 31,571 protein-coding genes and overall, 92.92% of genes were functionally annotated, including enriched and expanded families of genes responsible for biosynthesis of flavonoid, anthocyanin, monoterpenoid and their derivatives. Comparative analyses indicated that A. catechu probably diverged from its close relatives Elaeis guineensis and Cocos nucifera approximately 50.3 million years ago (Ma). Two whole genome duplication events in areca palm were found to be shared by palms and monocots, respectively. This genome assembly and associated resources represents an important addition to the palm genomics community and will be a valuable resource that will facilitate areca palm breeding and improve our understanding of areca palm biology and evolution.

Details

ISSN :
17550998 and 1755098X
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Ecology Resources
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....108ff5e729ff36f6f0385217a8ff461e