Extensive intraspecific gene order and gene structural variations between Mo17 and other maize genomes

Silong Sun(China Agricultural University), Yingsi Zhou(China Agricultural University), Jian Chen(China Agricultural University), Junpeng Shi(China Agricultural University), Haiming Zhao(China Agricultural University), Hainan Zhao(China Agricultural University), Weibin Song(China Agricultural University), Mei Zhang(China Agricultural University), Yang Cui(China Agricultural University), Xiaomei Dong(China Agricultural University), Han Liu(China Agricultural University), Xuxu Ma(China Agricultural University), Yinping Jiao(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Bo Wang(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Xuehong Wei(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Joshua C. Stein(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Jeff Glaubitz(Cornell University), Fei Lü(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guoliang Yu(Nextomics Biosciences (China)), Chengzhi Liang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kevin Fengler(Pioneer Hi-Bred), Bailin Li(Pioneer Hi-Bred), Antoni Rafalski(Pioneer Hi-Bred), Patrick S. Schnable(Iowa State University), Doreen Ware(Cornell University), Edward S. Buckler(Cornell University), Jinsheng Lai(China Agricultural University)
Nature Genetics
July 23, 2018
Cited by 460Open Access
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Abstract

Maize is an important crop with a high level of genome diversity and heterosis. The genome sequence of a typical female line, B73, was previously released. Here, we report a de novo genome assembly of a corresponding male representative line, Mo17. More than 96.4% of the 2,183 Mb assembled genome can be accounted for by 362 scaffolds in ten pseudochromosomes with 38,620 annotated protein-coding genes. Comparative analysis revealed large gene-order and gene structural variations: approximately 10% of the annotated genes were mutually nonsyntenic, and more than 20% of the predicted genes had either large-effect mutations or large structural variations, which might cause considerable protein divergence between the two inbred lines. Our study provides a high-quality reference-genome sequence of an important maize germplasm, and the intraspecific gene order and gene structural variations identified should have implications for heterosis and genome evolution.


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