The emerging biofuel crop Camelina sativa retains a highly undifferentiated hexaploid genome structure – S. Kagale, C. Koh, J. Nixon, V. Bollina, W.E. Clarke, R. Tuteja, C. Spillane, S.J. Robinson, M. G. Links, C. Clarke, E. E. Higgins, T. Huebert, A.G. S

Summary: We generated the first chromosome-scale high-quality reference genome sequence for C. sativa and annotated 89,418 protein-coding genes, representing a whole-genome triplication event relative to the crucifer model Arabidopsis thaliana. C. sativa represents the first crop species to be sequenced from lineage I of the Brassicaceae. The well-preserved hexaploid genome structure of C. sativa surprisingly mirrors those of economically important amphidiploid Brassica crop species from lineage II as well as wheat and cotton. The three genomes of C. sativa show no evidence of fractionation bias and limited expression-level bias, both characteristics commonly associated with polyploidy evolution. The highly undifferentiated polyploid genome of C. sativa presents significant consequences for breeding and genetic manipulation of this industrial oil crop. Link: (Open Access) http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140423/ncomms4706/full/ncomms4706.html

BACK TO TOP