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Carey, Sarah_B; Aközbek, Laramie; Lovell, John_T; Jenkins, Jerry; Healey, Adam_L; Shu, Shengqiang; Grabowski, Paul; Yocca, Alan; Stewart, Ada; Jones, Teresa; et al (, Nature Plants)
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Yocca, Alan; Akinyuwa, Mary; Bailey, Nick; Cliver, Brannan; Estes, Harrison; Guillemette, Abigail; Hasannin, Omar; Hutchison, Jennifer; Jenkins, Wren; Kaur, Ishveen; et al (, G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics)Abstract Cultivated pear consists of several Pyrus species with Pyrus communis (European pear) representing a large fraction of worldwide production. As a relatively recently domesticated crop and perennial tree, pear can benefit from genome-assisted breeding. Additionally, comparative genomics within Rosaceae promises greater understanding of evolution within this economically important family. Here, we generate a fully phased chromosome-scale genome assembly of P. communis ‘d’Anjou.’ Using PacBio HiFi and Dovetail Omni-C reads, the genome is resolved into the expected 17 chromosomes, with each haplotype totaling nearly 540 Megabases and a contig N50 of nearly 14 Mb. Both haplotypes are highly syntenic to each other and to the Malus domestica ‘Honeycrisp’ apple genome. Nearly 45,000 genes were annotated in each haplotype, over 90% of which have direct RNA-seq expression evidence. We detect signatures of the known whole-genome duplication shared between apple and pear, and we estimate 57% of d’Anjou genes are retained in duplicate derived from this event. This genome highlights the value of generating phased diploid assemblies for recovering the full allelic complement in highly heterozygous crop species.more » « less
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Healey, Adam L.; Piatkowski, Bryan; Lovell, John T.; Sreedasyam, Avinash; Carey, Sarah B.; Mamidi, Sujan; Shu, Shengqiang; Plott, Chris; Jenkins, Jerry; Lawrence, Travis; et al (, Nature Plants)Abstract Peatlands are crucial sinks for atmospheric carbon but are critically threatened due to warming climates.Sphagnum(peat moss) species are keystone members of peatland communities where they actively engineer hyperacidic conditions, which improves their competitive advantage and accelerates ecosystem-level carbon sequestration. To dissect the molecular and physiological sources of this unique biology, we generated chromosome-scale genomes of twoSphagnumspecies:S. divinumandS. angustifolium.Sphagnumgenomes show no gene colinearity with any other reference genome to date, demonstrating thatSphagnumrepresents an unsampled lineage of land plant evolution. The genomes also revealed an average recombination rate an order of magnitude higher than vascular land plants and short putative U/V sex chromosomes. These newly described sex chromosomes interact with autosomal loci that significantly impact growth across diverse pH conditions. This discovery demonstrates that the ability ofSphagnumto sequester carbon in acidic peat bogs is mediated by interactions between sex, autosomes and environment.more » « less
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