The genome of Draba nivalis shows signatures of adaptation to the extreme environmental stresses of the Arctic ...

The Arctic is one of the most extreme terrestrial environments on the planet. Here we present the first complete genome assembly of a plant adapted to the high Arctic, Draba nivalis (Brassicaceae), an attractive model species for studying plant adaptation to the stresses imposed by this harsh enviro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nowak, Michael, Birkeland, Siri, Mandáková, Terezie, Choudhury, Rimjhim Roy, Guo, Xinyi, Gustafsson, Lovisa, Gizaw, Abel, Schrøder-Nielsen, Audun, Fracassetti, Marco, Brysting, Anne, Rieseberg, Loren, Slotte, Tanja, Parisod, Christian, Lysak, Martin, Brochmann, Christian
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrm4
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrm4
Description
Summary:The Arctic is one of the most extreme terrestrial environments on the planet. Here we present the first complete genome assembly of a plant adapted to the high Arctic, Draba nivalis (Brassicaceae), an attractive model species for studying plant adaptation to the stresses imposed by this harsh environment. We used an iterative scaffolding strategy with data from short-reads, single-molecule long reads, proximity ligation data, and a genetic map to produce a 302 Mb assembly that is highly contiguous with 91.6% assembled into eight chromosomes (the base chromosome number). To identify candidate genes and gene families that may have facilitated adaptation to Arctic environmental stresses, we performed comparative genomic analyses with nine non-Arctic Brassicaceae species. We show that the D. nivalis genome contains expanded suites of genes associated with drought and cold stress (e.g. related to the maintenance of oxidation-reduction homeostasis, meiosis, and signaling pathways). The expansions of gene families ... : Please see ReadMe.txt for a full description of each file. ...