Pseudo-chromosome–length genome assembly of a double haploid “Bartlett” pear (Pyrus communis L.)

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Linsmith, Gareth
Rombauts, Stephane
Montanari, Sara
Deng, Cecilia H.
Celton, Jean-Marc
Guerif, Philippe
Liu, Chang
Zurn, Jason D.
Cestaro, Alessandro
Bassil, Nahla V.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Abstract

BACKGROUND : We report an improved assembly and scaffolding of the European pear (Pyrus communis L.) genome (referred to as BartlettDHv2.0), obtained using a combination of Pacific Biosciences RSII long-read sequencing, Bionano optical mapping, chromatin interaction capture (Hi-C), and genetic mapping. The sample selected for sequencing is a double haploid derived from the same “Bartlett” reference pear that was previously sequenced. Sequencing of di-haploid plants makes assembly more tractable in highly heterozygous species such as P. communis. FINDINGS : A total of 496.9 Mb corresponding to 97% of the estimated genome size were assembled into 494 scaffolds. Hi-C data and a high-density genetic map allowed us to anchor and orient 87% of the sequence on the 17 pear chromosomes. Approximately 50% (247 Mb) of the genome consists of repetitive sequences. Gene annotation confirmed the presence of 37,445 protein-coding genes, which is 13% fewer than previously predicted. CONCLUSIONS : We showed that the use of a doubled-haploid plant is an effective solution to the problems presented by high levels of heterozygosity and duplication for the generation of high-quality genome assemblies. We present a high-quality chromosome-scale assembly of the European pear Pyrus communis and demostrate its high degree of synteny with the genomes of Malus x Domestica and Pyrus x bretschneideri.

Description

Keywords

Pyrus communis L., Chromosome-scale assembly, Hi-C, Pac-Bio sequencing

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Linsmith, G., Rombauts, S., Montanari, S. et al. 2019, 'Pseudo-chromosome–length genome assembly of a double haploid “Bartlett” pear (Pyrus communis L.)', GigaScience, vol. 8, no. 12, pp. 1-17.