Abstract

Onion is an important vegetable crop with an estimated genome size of 16 Gb. We describe the de novo assembly and ab initio annotation of the genome of a doubled haploid onion line DHCU066619, which resulted in a final assembly of 14.9 Gb with an N50 of 464 Kb. Of this, 2.4 Gb was ordered into eight pseudomolecules using four genetic linkage maps. The remainder of the genome is available in 89.6 K scaffolds. Only 72.4% of the genome could be identified as repetitive sequences and consist, to a large extent, of (retro) transposons. In addition, an estimated 20% of the putative (retro) transposons had accumulated a large number of mutations, hampering their identification, but facilitating their assembly. These elements are probably already quite old. The ab initio gene prediction indicated 540,925 putative gene models, which is far more than expected, possibly due to the presence of pseudogenes. Of these models, 47,066 showed RNASeq support. No gene rich regions were found, genes are uniformly distributed over the genome. Analysis of synteny with Allium sativum (garlic) showed collinearity but also major rearrangements between both species. This assembly is the first high-quality genome sequence available for the study of onion and will be a valuable resource for further research.

Highlights

  • More than just a tasty culinary sensation, onion (Allium cepa L.) is one of the most important vegetable crops worldwide

  • We describe the de novo assembly and ab initio annotation of the genome of a doubled haploid onion line DHCU066619, which resulted in a final assembly of 14.9 Gb with an N50 of 464 Kb

  • A large genome size is often associated with repeat accumulation (Kelly and Leitch 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

More than just a tasty culinary sensation, onion (Allium cepa L.) is one of the most important vegetable crops worldwide. Due to the size of the genome and the repetitive nature, developing an onion reference genome assembly is challenging (Havey and McCallum 2012). While the availability of a reference genome has greatly stimulated research and led to accelerated breeding in many other crops (Kuhl et al 2005; Vitte et al 2013; Sun et al 2020), onion has not yet had this benefit. This onion assembly will be an important tool, facilitating onion breeding and research

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