De novo genome sequencing and comparative genomics of date palm (Phoenix dactylifera)

Eman Al‐Dous(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Binu George(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Maryam E. Al‐Mahmoud(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Moneera Y Al-Jaber(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Hao Wang(University of Georgia), Yasmeen Salameh(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Eman K. Al‐Azwani(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Srinivasa R. Chaluvadi(University of Georgia), Ana Clara Pontaroli(University of Georgia), Jeremy D. DeBarry(University of Georgia), Vincent Arondel(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), John B. Ohlrogge(Michigan State University), Imad J Saie(Ministry of Environment and Climate Change), Khaled Elmeer(Ministry of Environment and Climate Change), Jeffrey L. Bennetzen(University of Georgia), Robert R Kruegger(University of California, Riverside), Joel A. Malek(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar)
Nature Biotechnology
May 29, 2011
Cited by 415Open Access
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Abstract

Unlike most plants, date palms are either male or female. Assembly of a draft date palm genome, the first for a member of the order Arecales, reveals loci linked to gender and provides markers for improving traits such as fruit quality and ripening time. Date palm is one of the most economically important woody crops cultivated in the Middle East and North Africa and is a good candidate for improving agricultural yields in arid environments. Nonetheless, long generation times (5–8 years) and dioecy (separate male and female trees) have complicated its cultivation and genetic analysis. To address these issues, we assembled a draft genome for a Khalas variety female date palm, the first publicly available resource of its type for a member of the order Arecales. The ∼380 Mb sequence, spanning mainly gene-rich regions, includes >25,000 gene models and is predicted to cover ∼90% of genes and ∼60% of the genome. Sequencing of eight other cultivars, including females of the Deglet Noor and Medjool varieties and their backcrossed males, identified >3.5 million polymorphic sites, including >10,000 genic copy number variations. A small subset of these polymorphisms can distinguish multiple varieties. We identified a region of the genome linked to gender and found evidence that date palm employs an XY system of gender inheritance.


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