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Ingvarsson, P (Ed.)Abstract Eucalyptus grandis is a hardwood tree used worldwide as pure species or hybrid partner to breed fast-growing plantation forestry crops that serve as feedstocks of timber and lignocellulosic biomass for pulp, paper, biomaterials, and biorefinery products. The current v2.0 genome reference for the species served as the first reference for the genus and has helped drive the development of molecular breeding tools for eucalypts. Using PacBio HiFi long reads and Omni-C proximity ligation sequencing, we produced an improved, haplotype-phased assembly (v4.0) for TAG0014, an early-generation selection of E. grandis. The 2 haplotypes are 571 Mbp (HAP1) and 552 Mbp (HAP2) in size and consist of 37 and 46 contigs scaffolded onto 11 chromosomes (contig N50 of 28.9 and 16.7 Mbp), respectively. These haplotype assemblies are 70–90 Mbp smaller than the diploid v2.0 assembly but capture all except one of the 22 telomeres, suggesting that substantial redundant sequence was included in the previous assembly. A total of 35,929 (HAP1) and 35,583 (HAP2) gene models were annotated, of which 438 and 472 contain long introns (>10 kbp) in gene models previously (v2.0) identified as multiple smaller genes. These and other improvements have increased gene annotation completeness levels from 93.8 to 99.4% in the v4.0 assembly. We found that 6,493 and 6,346 genes are within tandem duplicate arrays (HAP1 and HAP2, respectively, 18.4 and 17.8% of the total) and >43.8% of the haplotype assemblies consists of repeat elements. Analysis of synteny between the haplotypes and the E. grandis v2.0 reference genome revealed extensive regions of collinearity, but also some major rearrangements, and provided a preview of population and pangenome variation in the species.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 30, 2026
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Longley, Reid; Robinson, Aaron; Liber, Julian A.; Bryson, Abigail E.; Morales, Demosthenes P.; LaButti, Kurt; Riley, Robert; Mondo, Stephen J.; Kuo, Alan; Yoshinaga, Yuko; et al (, Communications Biology)Abstract Diverse members of early-diverging Mucoromycota, including mycorrhizal taxa and soil-associated Mortierellaceae, are known to harbor Mollicutes-related endobacteria (MRE). It has been hypothesized that MRE were acquired by a common ancestor and transmitted vertically. Alternatively, MRE endosymbionts could have invaded after the divergence of Mucoromycota lineages and subsequently spread to new hosts horizontally. To better understand the evolutionary history of MRE symbionts, we generated and analyzed four complete MRE genomes from two Mortierellaceae genera:Linnemannia(MRE-L) andBenniella(MRE-B). These genomes include the smallest known of fungal endosymbionts and showed signals of a tight relationship with hosts including a reduced functional capacity and genes transferred from fungal hosts to MRE. Phylogenetic reconstruction including nine MRE from mycorrhizal fungi revealed that MRE-B genomes are more closely related to MRE from Glomeromycotina than MRE-L from the same host family. We posit that reductions in genome size, GC content, pseudogene content, and repeat content in MRE-L may reflect a longer-term relationship with their fungal hosts. These data indicateLinnemanniaandBenniellaMRE were likely acquired independently after their fungal hosts diverged from a common ancestor. This work expands upon foundational knowledge on minimal genomes and provides insights into the evolution of bacterial endosymbionts.more » « less
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