Updates in nanopore technology have made it possible to obtain gigabases of sequence data. Prior to this, nanopore sequencing technology was mainly used to analyze microbial samples. Here, we describe the generation of a comprehensive nanopore sequencing data set with a median read length of 11,979 bp for a self-compatible accession of the wild tomato species Solanum pennellii. We describe the assembly of its genome to a contig N50 of 2.5 MB. The assembly pipeline comprised initial read correction with Canu and assembly with SMARTdenovo. The resulting raw nanopore-based de novo genome is structurally highly similar to that of the reference S. pennellii LA716 accession but has a high error rate and was rich in homopolymer deletions. After polishing the assembly with Illumina reads, we obtained an error rate of <0.02% when assessed versus the same Illumina data. We obtained a gene completeness of 96.53%, slightly surpassing that of the reference S. pennellii. Taken together, our data indicate that such long read sequencing data can be used to affordably sequence and assemble gigabase-sized plant genomes.
Background: Plastoquinone biosynthesis in cyanobacteria differs from that in plants.Results: Chorismate pyruvate-lyase and 4-hydroxy-3-solanesylbenzoate decarboxylase single-gene knock-out mutants are severely affected in plastoquinone synthesis, cell size/structure, and growth. Conclusion: The plastoquinone biosynthetic pathway likely evolved from a pre-existing ubiquinone pathway in cyanobacterial ancestors. Significance: Cyanobacterial mutants deficient in plastoquinone biosynthesis allow deeper understanding of processes related to energy transformation.
PQ-9 (plastoquinone-9) has a central role in energy transformation processes in cyanobacteria by mediating electron transfer in both the photosynthetic as well as the respiratory electron transport chain. The present study provides evidence that the PQ-9 biosynthetic pathway in cyanobacteria differs substantially from that in plants. We identified 4-hydroxybenzoate as being the aromatic precursor for PQ-9 in Synechocystis sp. PCC6803, and in the present paper we report on the role of the membrane-bound 4-hydroxybenzoate solanesyltransferase, Slr0926, in PQ-9 biosynthesis and on the properties of the enzyme. The catalytic activity of Slr0926 was demonstrated by in vivo labelling experiments in Synechocystis sp., complementation studies in an Escherichia coli mutant with a defect in ubiquinone biosynthesis, and in vitro assays using the recombinant as well as the native enzyme. Although Slr0926 was highly specific for the prenyl acceptor substrate 4-hydroxybenzoate, it displayed a broad specificity with regard to the prenyl donor substrate and used not only solanesyl diphosphate, but also a number of shorter-chain prenyl diphosphates. In combination with in silico data, our results indicate that Slr0926 evolved from bacterial 4-hydroxybenzoate prenyltransferases catalysing prenylation in the course of ubiquinone biosynthesis.
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