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Draft genome sequence of ramie, Boehmeria nivea (L.) Gaudich

Authors :
Jikang Chen
Wang Xiaofei
Sun Zhimin
Chunming Yu
Heping Xiong
Qian-Qian Zhang
Juhong Zhou
Ming-Bao Luan
Xiaodong Fang
Xuanmin Guang
Qiang Gao
Shancen Zhao
Mingzhou Bai
Long Fang
Jianbo Jian
Chen Kunmei
Ping Chen
Jun-Hui Chen
Zhu Aiguo
Gao Gang
Jian-Hua Chen
Source :
Molecular ecology resources. 18(3)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Ramie, Boehmeria nivea (L.) Gaudich, family Urticaceae, is a plant native to eastern Asia, and one of the world's oldest fibre crops. It is also used as animal feed and for the phytoremediation of heavy metal-contaminated farmlands. Thus, the genome sequence of ramie was determined to explore the molecular basis of its fibre quality, protein content and phytoremediation. For further understanding ramie genome, different paired-end and mate-pair libraries were combined to generate 134.31 Gb of raw DNA sequences using the Illumina whole-genome shotgun sequencing approach. The highly heterozygous B. nivea genome was assembled using the Platanus Genome Assembler, which is an effective tool for the assembly of highly heterozygous genome sequences. The final length of the draft genome of this species was approximately 341.9 Mb (contig N50 = 22.62 kb, scaffold N50 = 1,126.36 kb). Based on ramie genome annotations, 30,237 protein-coding genes were predicted, and the repetitive element content was 46.3%. The completeness of the final assembly was evaluated by benchmarking universal single-copy orthologous genes (BUSCO); 90.5% of the 1,440 expected embryophytic genes were identified as complete, and 4.9% were identified as fragmented. Phylogenetic analysis based on single-copy gene families and one-to-one orthologous genes placed ramie with mulberry and cannabis, within the clade of urticalean rosids. Genome information of ramie will be a valuable resource for the conservation of endangered Boehmeria species and for future studies on the biogeography and characteristic evolution of members of Urticaceae.

Details

ISSN :
17550998
Volume :
18
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular ecology resources
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c2358f9a3742c32aba9558ce5532eb98