The genomes of pecan and Chinese hickory provide insights into Carya evolution and nut nutrition.

Youjun Huang, Lihong Xiao,Zhongren Zhang, Rui Zhang,Zhengjia Wang,Chunying Huang,Ren Huang, Yumeng Luan, Tongqiang Fan, Jianhua Wang,Chen Shen, Shenmei Zhang, Xinwang Wang,Jennifer Randall, Bingsong Zheng,Jiasheng Wu,Qixiang Zhang,Guohua Xia, Chuanmei Xu,Ming Chen,Liangsheng Zhang, Wenkai Jiang,Lizhi Gao, Zhiduan Chen,Charles A Leslie, L J Grauke,Jianqin Huang

GigaScience(2019)

Cited 86|Views9
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) and Chinese hickory (C. cathayensis) are important commercially cultivated nut trees in the genus Carya (Juglandaceae), with high nutritional value and substantial health benefits. RESULTS:We obtained >187.22 and 178.87 gigabases of sequence, and ∼288× and 248× genome coverage, to a pecan cultivar ("Pawnee") and a domesticated Chinese hickory landrace (ZAFU-1), respectively. The total assembly size is 651.31 megabases (Mb) for pecan and 706.43 Mb for Chinese hickory. Two genome duplication events before the divergence from walnut were found in these species. Gene family analysis highlighted key genes in biotic and abiotic tolerance, oil, polyphenols, essential amino acids, and B vitamins. Further analyses of reduced-coverage genome sequences of 16 Carya and 2 Juglans species provide additional phylogenetic perspective on crop wild relatives. CONCLUSIONS:Cooperative characterization of these valuable resources provides a window to their evolutionary development and a valuable foundation for future crop improvement.
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