| Literature DB >> 21623354 |
Eman K Al-Dous1, Binu George, Maryam E Al-Mahmoud, Moneera Y Al-Jaber, Hao Wang, Yasmeen M Salameh, Eman K Al-Azwani, Srinivasa Chaluvadi, Ana C Pontaroli, Jeremy DeBarry, Vincent Arondel, John Ohlrogge, Imad J Saie, Khaled M Suliman-Elmeer, Jeffrey L Bennetzen, Robert R Kruegger, Joel A Malek.
Abstract
Date palm is one of the most economically important woody crops cultivated in the Middle East and North Africa and is a good candidate for improving agricultural yields in arid environments. Nonetheless, long generation times (5-8 years) and dioecy (separate male and female trees) have complicated its cultivation and genetic analysis. To address these issues, we assembled a draft genome for a Khalas variety female date palm, the first publicly available resource of its type for a member of the order Arecales. The ∼380 Mb sequence, spanning mainly gene-rich regions, includes >25,000 gene models and is predicted to cover ∼90% of genes and ∼60% of the genome. Sequencing of eight other cultivars, including females of the Deglet Noor and Medjool varieties and their backcrossed males, identified >3.5 million polymorphic sites, including >10,000 genic copy number variations. A small subset of these polymorphisms can distinguish multiple varieties. We identified a region of the genome linked to gender and found evidence that date palm employs an XY system of gender inheritance.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21623354 DOI: 10.1038/nbt.1860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biotechnol ISSN: 1087-0156 Impact factor: 54.908