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The genome draft of coconut (Cocos nucifera)

Authors :
Xiao, Yong
Xu, Pengwei
Fan, Haikuo
Baudouin, Luc
Xia, Wei
Bocs, Stéphanie
Xu, Junyang
Li, Qiong
Guo, Anping
Zhou, Lixia
Li, Jing
Wu, Yi
Ma, Zilong
Armero Villanueva, Alix Augusto
Issali, Auguste Emmanuel
Liu, Na
Peng, Ming
Yang, Yaodong
Xiao, Yong
Xu, Pengwei
Fan, Haikuo
Baudouin, Luc
Xia, Wei
Bocs, Stéphanie
Xu, Junyang
Li, Qiong
Guo, Anping
Zhou, Lixia
Li, Jing
Wu, Yi
Ma, Zilong
Armero Villanueva, Alix Augusto
Issali, Auguste Emmanuel
Liu, Na
Peng, Ming
Yang, Yaodong
Source :
GigaScience
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Coconut palm (Cocos nucifera,2n = 32), a member of genus Cocos and family Arecaceae (Palmaceae), is an important tropical fruit and oil crop. Currently, coconut palm is cultivated in 93 countries, including Central and South America, East and West Africa, Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, with a total growth area of more than 12 million hectares [1]. Coconut palm is generally classified into 2 main categories: “Tall” (flowering 8–10 years after planting) and “Dwarf” (flowering 4–6 years after planting), based on morphological characteristics and breeding habits. This Palmae species has a long growth period before reproductive years, which hinders conventional breeding progress. In spite of initial successes, improvements made by conventional breeding have been very slow. In the present study, we obtained de novo sequences of the Cocos nucifera genome: a major genomic resource that could be used to facilitate molecular breeding in Cocos nucifera and accelerate the breeding process in this important crop. A total of 419.67 gigabases (Gb) of raw reads were generated by the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform using a series of paired-end and mate-pair libraries, covering the predicted Cocos nucifera genome length (2.42 Gb, variety “Hainan Tall”) to an estimated ×173.32 read depth. A total scaffold length of 2.20 Gb was generated (N50 = 418 Kb), representing 90.91% of the genome. The coconut genome was predicted to harbor 28 039 protein-coding genes, which is less than in Phoenix dactylifera (PDK30: 28 889), Phoenix dactylifera (DPV01: 41 660), and Elaeis guineensis (EG5: 34 802). BUSCO evaluation demonstrated that the obtained scaffold sequences covered 90.8% of the coconut genome and that the genome annotation was 74.1% complete. Genome annotation results revealed that 72.75% of the coconut genome consisted of transposable elements, of which long-terminal repeat retrotransposons elements (LTRs) accounted for the largest proportion (92.23%). Comparative analysis of the a

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
GigaScience
Notes :
Hainan, text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1055755320
Document Type :
Electronic Resource