| Literature DB >> 34135482 |
Hailin Liu1,2, Xiaobo Wang2,3, Guibin Wang1, Peng Cui2, Shigang Wu2, Cheng Ai2, Nan Hu1,4, Alun Li2, Bing He2, Xiujuan Shao2, Zhichao Wu2, Hu Feng2, Yuxiao Chang2, Desheng Mu2, Jing Hou1, Xiaogang Dai1, Tongming Yin5, Jue Ruan6, Fuliang Cao7.
Abstract
Gymnosperms are a unique lineage of plants that currently lack a high-quality reference genome due to their large genome size and high repetitive sequence content. Here, we report a nearly complete genome assembly for Ginkgo biloba with a genome size of 9.87 Gb, an N50 contig size of 1.58 Mb and an N50 scaffold size of 775 Mb. We were able to accurately annotate 27,832 protein-coding genes in total, superseding the inaccurate annotation of 41,840 genes in a previous draft genome assembly. We found that expansion of the G. biloba genome, accompanied by the notable extension of introns, was mainly caused by the insertion of long terminal repeats rather than the recent occurrence of whole-genome duplication events, in contrast to the findings of a previous report. We also identified candidate genes in the central pair, intraflagellar transport and dynein protein families that are associated with the formation of the spermatophore flagellum, which has been lost in all seed plants except ginkgo and cycads. The newly obtained Ginkgo genome provides new insights into the evolution of the gymnosperm genome.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34135482 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-021-00933-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793