Telomere-to-telomere and gap-free reference genome assembly of the kiwifruit <i>Actinidia chinensis</i>

Junyang Yue(Anhui Agricultural University), Qinyao Chen(Anhui Agricultural University), Yingzhen Wang(Anhui Agricultural University), Lei Zhang(Hubei Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Chen Ye(Anhui Agricultural University), Xu Wang(Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen), Shuo Cao(Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen), Yunzhi Lin(Sichuan University), Wei Huang, Xian He(Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Hongyan Qin(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Yanli Wang(Anhui Agricultural University), Sijia Zhang(Anhui Agricultural University), Ying Wu(Anhui Agricultural University), Songhu Wang(Anhui Agricultural University), Yi Yue(Anhui Agricultural University), Yongsheng Liu(Anhui Agricultural University)
Horticulture Research
December 2, 2022
Cited by 97Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Kiwifruit is an economically and nutritionally important fruit crop with extremely high contents of vitamin C. However, the previously released versions of kiwifruit genomes all have a mass of unanchored or missing regions. Here, we report a highly continuous and completely gap-free reference genome of Actinidia chinensis cv. ‘Hongyang’, named Hongyang v4.0, which is the first to achieve two de novo haploid-resolved haplotypes, HY4P and HY4A. HY4P and HY4A have a total length of 606.1 and 599.6 Mb, respectively, with almost the entire telomeres and centromeres assembled in each haplotype. In comparison with Hongyang v3.0, the integrity and contiguity of Hongyang v4.0 is markedly improved by filling all unclosed gaps and correcting some misoriented regions, resulting in ~38.6–39.5 Mb extra sequences, which might affect 4263 and 4244 protein-coding genes in HY4P and HY4A, respectively. Furthermore, our gap-free genome assembly provides the first clue for inspecting the structure and function of centromeres. Globally, centromeric regions are characterized by higher-order repeats that mainly consist of a 153-bp conserved centromere-specific monomer (Ach-CEN153) with different copy numbers among chromosomes. Functional enrichment analysis of the genes located within centromeric regions demonstrates that chromosome centromeres may not only play physical roles for linking a pair of sister chromatids, but also have genetic features for participation in the regulation of cell division. The availability of the telomere-to-telomere and gap-free Hongyang v4.0 reference genome lays a solid foundation not only for illustrating genome structure and functional genomics studies but also for facilitating kiwifruit breeding and improvement.


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