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DOI: 10.1038/ng.889
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

The genome of the extremophile crucifer Thellungiella parvula

Maheshi Dassanayake,Dong-Ha Oh,Jeffrey S Haas,Álvaro González Hernández,Hyewon Hong,Shahjahan Ali,Dae‐Jin Yun,Ray A. Bressan,Jian‐Kang Zhu,Hans J. Bohnert,John M. Cheeseman

Biology
Genome
Contig
2011
Thellungiella parvula is related to Arabidopsis thaliana and is endemic to saline, resource-poor habitats, making it a model for the evolution of plant adaptation to extreme environments. Here we present the draft genome for this extremophile species. Exclusively by next generation sequencing, we obtained the de novo assembled genome in 1,496 gap-free contigs, closely approximating the estimated genome size of 140 Mb. We anchored these contigs to seven pseudo chromosomes without the use of maps. We show that short reads can be assembled to a near-complete chromosome level for a eukaryotic species lacking prior genetic information. The sequence identifies a number of tandem duplications that, by the nature of the duplicated genes, suggest a possible basis for T. parvula's extremophile lifestyle. Our results provide essential background for developing genomically influenced testable hypotheses for the evolution of environmental stress tolerance.
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    The genome of the extremophile crucifer Thellungiella parvula” is a paper by Maheshi Dassanayake Dong-Ha Oh Jeffrey S Haas Álvaro González Hernández Hyewon Hong Shahjahan Ali Dae‐Jin Yun Ray A. Bressan Jian‐Kang Zhu Hans J. Bohnert John M. Cheeseman published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.