作者
Shihui Niu,Li Jiang,Wenhao Bo,Weifei Yang,Andrea Zuccolo,Stefania Giacomello,Xi Chen,Fang-Xu Han,Junhe Yang,Yi-tong Song,Yumeng Nie,Biao Zhou,Peiyi Wang,Quan Zuo,Hui Zhang,Jingjing Ma,Jun Wang,Lvji Wang,Qianya Zhu,Huanhuan Zhao,Zhanmin Liu,Xuemei Zhang,Tao Liu,Surui Pei,Zhimin Li,Yao Hu,Yehui Yang,Wenzhao Li,Yanjun Zan,Linghua Zhou,Jinxing Lin,Tong‐Qi Yuan,Wei Li,Yue Li,Hairong Wei,Harry X. Wu
摘要
Conifers dominate the world’s forest ecosystems and are the most widely planted tree species. Their giant and complex genomes present great challenges for assembling a complete reference genome for evolutionary and genomic studies. We present a 25.4-Gb chromosome-level assembly of Chinese pine (Pinus tabuliformis) and revealed that its genome size is mostly attributable to huge intergenic regions and long introns with high transposable element (TE) content. Large genes with long introns exhibited higher expressions levels. Despite a lack of recent whole-genome duplication, 91.2% of genes were duplicated through dispersed duplication, and expanded gene families are mainly related to stress responses, which may underpin conifers’ adaptation, particularly in cold and/or arid conditions. The reproductive regulation network is distinct compared with angiosperms. Slow removal of TEs with high-level methylation may have contributed to genomic expansion. This study provides insights into conifer evolution and resources for advancing research on conifer adaptation and development.