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The genome of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp.)
Authors:Stefano Lonardi  María Muoz‐Amatriaín  Qihua Liang  Shengqiang Shu  Steve I Wanamaker  Sassoum Lo  Jaakko Tanskanen  Alan H Schulman  Tingting Zhu  Ming‐Cheng Luo  Hind Alhakami  Rachid Ounit  Abid Md Hasan  Jerome Verdier  Philip A Roberts  Jansen RP Santos  Arsenio Ndeve  Jaroslav Doleel  Jan Vrna  Samuel A Hokin  Andrew D Farmer  Steven B Cannon  Timothy J Close
Institution:Stefano Lonardi,María Muñoz‐Amatriaín,Qihua Liang,Shengqiang Shu,Steve I. Wanamaker,Sassoum Lo,Jaakko Tanskanen,Alan H. Schulman,Tingting Zhu,Ming‐Cheng Luo,Hind Alhakami,Rachid Ounit,Abid Md. Hasan,Jerome Verdier,Philip A. Roberts,Jansen R.P. Santos,Arsenio Ndeve,Jaroslav Dole?el,Jan Vrána,Samuel A. Hokin,Andrew D. Farmer,Steven B. Cannon,Timothy J. Close
Abstract:Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.] Walp.) is a major crop for worldwide food and nutritional security, especially in sub‐Saharan Africa, that is resilient to hot and drought‐prone environments. An assembly of the single‐haplotype inbred genome of cowpea IT97K‐499‐35 was developed by exploiting the synergies between single‐molecule real‐time sequencing, optical and genetic mapping, and an assembly reconciliation algorithm. A total of 519 Mb is included in the assembled sequences. Nearly half of the assembled sequence is composed of repetitive elements, which are enriched within recombination‐poor pericentromeric regions. A comparative analysis of these elements suggests that genome size differences between Vigna species are mainly attributable to changes in the amount of Gypsy retrotransposons. Conversely, genes are more abundant in more distal, high‐recombination regions of the chromosomes; there appears to be more duplication of genes within the NBS‐LRR and the SAUR‐like auxin superfamilies compared with other warm‐season legumes that have been sequenced. A surprising outcome is the identification of an inversion of 4.2 Mb among landraces and cultivars, which includes a gene that has been associated in other plants with interactions with the parasitic weed Striga gesnerioides. The genome sequence facilitated the identification of a putative syntelog for multiple organ gigantism in legumes. A revised numbering system has been adopted for cowpea chromosomes based on synteny with common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris). An estimate of nuclear genome size of 640.6 Mbp based on cytometry is presented.
Keywords:chromosomal inversion  cowpea  domestication  genome annotation  genome evolution  genome size  next‐generation sequencing  legumes     Phaseolus vulgaris     repetitive elements     Vigna unguiculata   
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