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Extensive sequence divergence between the reference genomes of two elite indica rice varieties Zhenshan 97 and Minghui 63.

Jianwei ZhangLing-Ling ChenFeng XingDavid A KudrnaWen YaoDario CopettiTing MuWeiming LiJia-Ming SongWeibo XieSeunghee LeeJayson TalagLin ShaoYue AnChun-Liu ZhangYidan OuyangShuai SunWen-Biao JiaoFang LvBogu DuMeizhong LuoCarlos Ernesto MaldonadoJose Luis GoicoecheaLizhong XiongChangyin WuYongzhong XingDao-Xiu ZhouSibin YuYu ZhaoGongwei WangYeisoo YuYijie LuoZhi-Wei ZhouBeatriz Elena Padilla HurtadoAnn DanowitzRod A WingQifa Zhang
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2016)
Asian cultivated rice consists of two subspecies: Oryza sativa subsp. indica and O. sativa subsp. japonica Despite the fact that indica rice accounts for over 70% of total rice production worldwide and is genetically much more diverse, a high-quality reference genome for indica rice has yet to be published. We conducted map-based sequencing of two indica rice lines, Zhenshan 97 (ZS97) and Minghui 63 (MH63), which represent the two major varietal groups of the indica subspecies and are the parents of an elite Chinese hybrid. The genome sequences were assembled into 237 (ZS97) and 181 (MH63) contigs, with an accuracy >99.99%, and covered 90.6% and 93.2% of their estimated genome sizes. Comparative analyses of these two indica genomes uncovered surprising structural differences, especially with respect to inversions, translocations, presence/absence variations, and segmental duplications. Approximately 42% of nontransposable element related genes were identical between the two genomes. Transcriptome analysis of three tissues showed that 1,059-2,217 more genes were expressed in the hybrid than in the parents and that the expressed genes in the hybrid were much more diverse due to their divergence between the parental genomes. The public availability of two high-quality reference genomes for the indica subspecies of rice will have large-ranging implications for plant biology and crop genetic improvement.
Keyphrases
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