2020
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.560096
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Sequencing Multiple Cotton Genomes Reveals Complex Structures and Lays Foundation for Breeding

Abstract: Cotton is a major fiber plant, which provides raw materials for clothing, protecting humans from the harsh environment of cold or hot weathers, enriching the culture and custom of human societies. Due to its importance, the diploid and tetraploid genomes of different cotton plants have been repeatedly sequenced to obtain their complete and fine genome sequences. These valuable genome data sets revealed the evolutionary past of the cotton plants, which were recursively affected by polyploidization, with a decap… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(159 reference statements)
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“…Additionally, to understand the molecular and biological functions of genes involved in cotton fiber growth and development, the multi-omics approach was also taken into consideration (Pang et al, 2009; Rai et al, 2013; Song et al, 2015; Zou et al, 2016; Song et al, 2017; Kumar et al, 2018; Ayubov et al, 2019; Li et al, 2019). In recent years, many researchers were reannotated the cotton genome sequence by third and fourth generation sequencing techniques to get the high contiguity genome (Pan et al, 2020). Prior to cotton genome sequence was available, several transcriptome data (Wang et al, 2010; Nigam et al, 2014; Peng et al, 2014; Cheng et al, 2016; Parekh et al, 2018) were generated that would not have been mapped properly due to the unavailability of a well furnished reference genome.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, to understand the molecular and biological functions of genes involved in cotton fiber growth and development, the multi-omics approach was also taken into consideration (Pang et al, 2009; Rai et al, 2013; Song et al, 2015; Zou et al, 2016; Song et al, 2017; Kumar et al, 2018; Ayubov et al, 2019; Li et al, 2019). In recent years, many researchers were reannotated the cotton genome sequence by third and fourth generation sequencing techniques to get the high contiguity genome (Pan et al, 2020). Prior to cotton genome sequence was available, several transcriptome data (Wang et al, 2010; Nigam et al, 2014; Peng et al, 2014; Cheng et al, 2016; Parekh et al, 2018) were generated that would not have been mapped properly due to the unavailability of a well furnished reference genome.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the frequency of occurrence of Copia LTR retrotransposons is higher in G. raimondii (D5 genome) -the smallest genome size (885 Mb). At the same time, the occurrence frequency of the Gypsy LTR retroelements is higher in species with a large genome size [6,[32][33][34]. Additionally, it was established that the wide distribution of GORGE3 (Gossypium retrotransposable gypsy-like element) in A-and AD-genome was the reason for their upsizing [31,32,35,36].…”
Section: Mobile Elements In Genomementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cotton fiber is basically elongated single cell of seed epidermis (trichome) with a clear gradation of development stages: fiber initiation, elongation, secondary biosynthesis of the cell walls and maturation [33,46,47]. It first appeared among ancestral diploid cotton with A-genome after divergence with F-genome [1,6,48].…”
Section: Effects Of Polyploidy On Fiber Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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