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Chromosome-scale Elaeis guineensis and E. oleifera assemblies: Comparative genomics of oil palm and other Arecaceae.

Eng-Ti Leslie LowKuang-Lim ChanNoorhariza Mohd ZakiElizaveta TaranenkoJared M OrdwayCorey WischmeyerJaap BuntjerMohd Amin Ab HalimNik Shazana Nik Mohd SanusiJayanthi NagappanRozana RosliEugeniya BondarNadzirah AmiruddinNorashikin SarpanNgoot-Chin TingPek-Lan ChanMeilina Ong-AbdullahMarhalil MarjuniSuzana MustaffaNorziha AbdullahNorazah AziziBlaire BacherNathan LakeyTatiana V TatarinovaMohamad Arif Abd ManafRavigadevi SambanthamurtiRajinder Singh
Published in: G3 (Bethesda, Md.) (2024)
Elaeis guineensis and E. oleifera are the two species of oil palm. E. guineensis is the most widely cultivated commercial species, and introgression of desirable traits from E. oleifera is ongoing. We report an improved E. guineensis genome assembly with substantially increased continuity and completeness, as well as the first chromosome-scale E. oleifera genome assembly. Each assembly was obtained by integration of long-read sequencing, proximity ligation sequencing, optical mapping and genetic mapping. High interspecific genome conservation is observed between the two species. The study provides the most extensive gene annotation to date, including 46,697 E. guineensis and 38,658 E. oleifera gene predictions. Analyses of repetitive element families further resolve the DNA repeat architecture of both genomes. Comparative genomic analyses identified experimentally validated small structural variants between the oil palm species and resolved the mechanism of chromosomal fusions responsible for the evolutionary descending dysploidy from 18 to 16 chromosomes.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • high resolution
  • single cell
  • single molecule
  • high density
  • mass spectrometry
  • genome wide identification