4.8 Article

The genome of flax (Linum usitatissimum) assembled de novo from short shotgun sequence reads

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 72, Issue 3, Pages 461-473

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05093.x

Keywords

whole-genome shotgun; DNA sequencing; Illumina; flax; Malpighiales; industrial crops

Categories

Funding

  1. Genome Alberta/Genome Canada
  2. Government of Alberta
  3. Alberta Innovates Technology Futures-iCORE
  4. Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique France
  5. Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Flax (Linum usitatissimum) is an ancient crop that is widely cultivated as a source of fiber, oil and medicinally relevant compounds. To accelerate crop improvement, we performed whole-genome shotgun sequencing of the nuclear genome of flax. Seven paired-end libraries ranging in size from 300 bp to 10 kb were sequenced using an Illumina genome analyzer. A de novo assembly, comprised exclusively of deep-coverage (approximately 94 x raw, approximately 69 x filtered) short-sequence reads (44-100 bp), produced a set of scaffolds with N50 = 694 kb, inclf non-redundant sequence representing an estimated 81% genome coverage.uding contigs with N50 = 20.1 kb. The contig assembly contained 302 Mb o Up to 96% of published flax ESTs aligned to the whole-genome shotgun scaffolds. However, comparisons with independently sequenced BACs and fosmids showed some mis-assembly of regions at the genome scale. A total of 43 384 protein-coding genes were predicted in the whole-genome shotgun assembly, and up to 93% of published flax ESTs, and 86% of A. thaliana genes aligned to these predicted genes, indicating excellent coverage and accuracy at the gene level. Analysis of the synonymous substitution rates (Ks) observed within duplicate gene pairs was consistent with a recent (5-9 MYA) whole-genome duplication in flax. Within the predicted proteome, we observed enrichment of many conserved domains (Pfam-A) that may contribute to the unique properties of this crop, including agglutinin proteins. Together these results show that de novo assembly, based solely on whole-genome shotgun short-sequence reads, is an efficient means of obtaining nearly complete genome sequence information for some plant species.

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