Skip to main content
Download PDF
- Main
Single-molecule sequencing and optical mapping yields an improved genome of woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) with chromosome-scale contiguity
- Edger, Patrick P;
- VanBuren, Robert;
- Colle, Marivi;
- Poorten, Thomas J;
- Wai, Ching Man;
- Niederhuth, Chad E;
- Alger, Elizabeth I;
- Ou, Shujun;
- Acharya, Charlotte B;
- Wang, Jie;
- Callow, Pete;
- McKain, Michael R;
- Shi, Jinghua;
- Collier, Chad;
- Xiong, Zhiyong;
- Mower, Jeffrey P;
- Slovin, Janet P;
- Hytönen, Timo;
- Jiang, Ning;
- Childs, Kevin L;
- Knapp, Steven J
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/gix124Abstract
Background
Although draft genomes are available for most agronomically important plant species, the majority are incomplete, highly fragmented, and often riddled with assembly and scaffolding errors. These assembly issues hinder advances in tool development for functional genomics and systems biology.Findings
Here we utilized a robust, cost-effective approach to produce high-quality reference genomes. We report a near-complete genome of diploid woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) using single-molecule real-time sequencing from Pacific Biosciences (PacBio). This assembly has a contig N50 length of ∼7.9 million base pairs (Mb), representing a ∼300-fold improvement of the previous version. The vast majority (>99.8%) of the assembly was anchored to 7 pseudomolecules using 2 sets of optical maps from Bionano Genomics. We obtained ∼24.96 Mb of sequence not present in the previous version of the F. vesca genome and produced an improved annotation that includes 1496 new genes. Comparative syntenic analyses uncovered numerous, large-scale scaffolding errors present in each chromosome in the previously published version of the F. vesca genome.Conclusions
Our results highlight the need to improve existing short-read based reference genomes. Furthermore, we demonstrate how genome quality impacts commonly used analyses for addressing both fundamental and applied biological questions.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
File name:
-
File size:
-
Title:
-
Author:
-
Subject:
-
Keywords:
-
Creation Date:
-
Modification Date:
-
Creator:
-
PDF Producer:
-
PDF Version:
-
Page Count:
-
Page Size:
-
Fast Web View:
-
Preparing document for printing…
0%