Whole-genome sequencing of Oryza brachyantha reveals mechanisms underlying Oryza genome evolution

Jinfeng Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Quanfei Huang(BGI Group (China)), Dongying Gao(University of Georgia), Junyi Wang(BGI Group (China)), Yongshan Lang(BGI Group (China)), Tieyan Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bo Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zetao Bai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), José Luis Goicoechea(University of Arizona), Chengzhi Liang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chengbin Chen(Nankai University), Wenli Zhang(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Shouhong Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yi Liao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xuemei Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chengli Song(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Meijiao Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jinfeng Shi(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Geng Liu(BGI Group (China)), Junjie Liu(BGI Group (China)), Heling Zhou(BGI Group (China)), Weili Zhou(BGI Group (China)), Qiulin Yu(BGI Group (China)), Na An(BGI Group (China)), Yan Chen(BGI Group (China)), Qingle Cai(BGI Group (China)), Bo Wang(BGI Group (China)), Binghang Liu(BGI Group (China)), Jiumeng Min(BGI Group (China)), Ying Huang(BGI Group (China)), Honglong Wu(BGI Group (China)), Zhenyu Li(BGI Group (China)), Yong Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Ye Yin(BGI Group (China)), Wenqin Song(Nankai University), Jiming Jiang(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Scott A. Jackson(University of Georgia), Rod A. Wing(University of Arizona), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China)), Mingsheng Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nature Communications
March 12, 2013
Cited by 214Open Access
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Abstract

The wild species of the genus Oryza contain a largely untapped reservoir of agronomically important genes for rice improvement. Here we report the 261-Mb de novo assembled genome sequence of Oryza brachyantha. Low activity of long-terminal repeat retrotransposons and massive internal deletions of ancient long-terminal repeat elements lead to the compact genome of Oryza brachyantha. We model 32,038 protein-coding genes in the Oryza brachyantha genome, of which only 70% are located in collinear positions in comparison with the rice genome. Analysing breakpoints of non-collinear genes suggests that double-strand break repair through non-homologous end joining has an important role in gene movement and erosion of collinearity in the Oryza genomes. Transition of euchromatin to heterochromatin in the rice genome is accompanied by segmental and tandem duplications, further expanded by transposable element insertions. The high-quality reference genome sequence of Oryza brachyantha provides an important resource for functional and evolutionary studies in the genus Oryza. The wild rice species can be used as germplasm resources for this crop’s genetic improvement. Here Chen and colleagues report the de novo sequencing of the O. brachyanthagenome, and identify the origin of genome size variation, the role of gene movement and its implications on heterochromatin evolution in the rice genome.


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