The draft genome of watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) and resequencing of 20 diverse accessions

Shaogui Guo(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Jianguo Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Honghe Sun(Cornell University), Jérôme Salse(Génétique, Diversité, Écophysiologie des Céréales), William J. Lucas(University of California, Davis), Haiying Zhang(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Yi Zheng(Cornell University), Linyong Mao(Cornell University), Yi Ren(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Zhiwen Wang(BGI Group (China)), Jiumeng Min(BGI Group (China)), Xiaosen Guo(BGI Group (China)), Florent Murat(Génétique, Diversité, Écophysiologie des Céréales), Byung‐Kook Ham(University of California, Davis), Zhaoliang Zhang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Shan Gao(Cornell University), Mingyun Huang(Cornell University), Yimin Xu(Cornell University), Silin Zhong(Cornell University), Aureliano Bombarely(Cornell University), Lukas A. Mueller(Cornell University), Hong Zhao(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Hongju He(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Yan Zhang(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Zhonghua Zhang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Sanwen Huang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Tao Tan(Beijing Normal University), Erli Pang(Beijing Normal University), Kui Lin(Beijing Normal University), Qun Hu(Huazhong Agricultural University), Hanhui Kuang(Huazhong Agricultural University), Peixiang Ni(BGI Group (China)), Bo Wang(BGI Group (China)), Jingan Liu(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Qinghe Kou(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Wenju Hou(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Xiaohua Zou(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Jiao Jiang(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Guoyi Gong(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Kathrin Klee(University of Bonn), Heiko Schoof(University of Bonn), Ying Huang(BGI Group (China)), Xuesong Hu(BGI Group (China)), Shanshan Dong(BGI Group (China)), Dequan Liang(BGI Group (China)), Juan Wang(BGI Group (China)), Kui Wu(BGI Group (China)), Yang Xia(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Xiang Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Zequn Zheng(BGI Group (China)), Miao Xing(BGI Group (China)), Xinming Liang(BGI Group (China)), Bangqing Huang(BGI Group (China)), Tian Lv(BGI Group (China)), Junyi Wang(BGI Group (China)), Ye Yin(BGI Group (China)), Hongping Yi(Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Ruiqiang Li(Novogene Bioinformatics Institute), Mingzhu Wu(Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Amnon Levi(Agricultural Research Service), Xingping Zhang(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), James J. Giovannoni(Cornell University), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China)), Yunfu Li(Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences), Zhangjun Fei(Cornell University), Yong Xu(Cornell University)
Nature Genetics
November 25, 2012
Cited by 826Open Access
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Abstract

Zhangjun Fei and colleagues report the draft genome of a Chinese elite watermelon inbred line 97103 and resequencing of 20 diverse accessions that represent the three subspecies of Citrullus lunatus. Comparative genome-wide analyses identify the extent of genetic diversity and population structure of watermelon germplasm. Watermelon, Citrullus lanatus, is an important cucurbit crop grown throughout the world. Here we report a high-quality draft genome sequence of the east Asia watermelon cultivar 97103 (2n = 2× = 22) containing 23,440 predicted protein-coding genes. Comparative genomics analysis provided an evolutionary scenario for the origin of the 11 watermelon chromosomes derived from a 7-chromosome paleohexaploid eudicot ancestor. Resequencing of 20 watermelon accessions representing three different C. lanatus subspecies produced numerous haplotypes and identified the extent of genetic diversity and population structure of watermelon germplasm. Genomic regions that were preferentially selected during domestication were identified. Many disease-resistance genes were also found to be lost during domestication. In addition, integrative genomic and transcriptomic analyses yielded important insights into aspects of phloem-based vascular signaling in common between watermelon and cucumber and identified genes crucial to valuable fruit-quality traits, including sugar accumulation and citrulline metabolism.


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