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Article|15 Oct 2019|OPEN
A high-quality Actinidia chinensis (kiwifruit) genome
Haolin Wu1 , Tao Ma1 , Minghui Kang1 , Fandi Ai1 , Junlin Zhang1 , Guanyong Dong2 and Jianquan Liu,3 ,
1Key Laboratory of Bio-Resource and Eco-Environment of Ministry of Education and State Key Laboratory of Hydraulics and Mountain River Engineering, College of Life Sciences, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610065, China
2The Limited Agriculture Company of Xinyuan Sacred Fruit, Shifang, Deyang 618409 Sichuan, China
3State Key Laboratory of Grassland Agro-Ecosystem, Institute of Innovation Ecology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: liujq@nwipb.ac.cn

Horticulture Research 6,
Article number: 117 (2019)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-019-0202-y
Views: 1229

Received: 03 May 2019
Revised: 04 Jul 2019
Accepted: 02 Sep 2019
Published online: 15 Oct 2019

Abstract

Actinidia chinensis (kiwifruit) is a perennial horticultural crop species of the Actinidiaceae family with high nutritional and economic value. Two versions of the A. chinensis genomes have been previously assembled, based mainly on relatively short reads. Here, we report an improved chromosome-level reference genome of A. chinensis (v3.0), based mainly on PacBio long reads and Hi-C data. The high-quality assembled genome is 653 Mb long, with 0.76% heterozygosity. At least 43% of the genome consists of repetitive sequences, and the most abundant long terminal repeats were further identified and account for 23.38% of our novel genome. It has clear improvements in contiguity, accuracy, and gene annotation over the two previous versions and contains 40,464 annotated protein-coding genes, of which 94.41% are functionally annotated. Moreover, further analyses of genetic collinearity revealed that the kiwifruit genome has undergone two whole-genome duplications: one affecting all Ericales families near the K-T extinction event and a recent genus-specific duplication. The reference genome presented here will be highly useful for further molecular elucidation of diverse traits and for the breeding of this horticultural crop, as well as evolutionary studies with related taxa.