Achnatherum splendens Trin. (Gramineae) is a constructive species of the arid grassland ecosystem in Northwest China and is a major forage grass. It has good tolerance of salt and drought stress in alkaline habitats. Here, we report its chromosome-level genome, determined through a combination of Illumina HiSeq sequencing, PacBio sequencing and Hi-C technology. The final assembly of the ~1.17 Gb genome sequence had a super-scaffold N50 of 40.3 Mb. A total of 57 374 protein-coding genes were annotated, of which 54 426 (94.5%) genes have functional protein annotations. Approximately 735 Mb (62.37%) of the assembly were identified as repetitive elements, and among these, LTRs (40.53%) constitute the highest proportion, having made a major contribution to the expansion of genome size in A. splendens. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that A. splendens diverged from the Brachypodium distachyon-Hordeum vulgare-Aegilops tauschii subclade around 37 million years ago (Ma) and that a clade comprising these four species diverged from the Phyllostachys edulis clade ~47 Ma. Genomic synteny indicates that A. splendens underwent an additional species-specific whole-genome duplication (WGD) 18-20 Ma, which further promoted an increase in copies of numerous saline-alkali-related gene families in the A. splendens genome. By transcriptomic analysis, we further found that many of these duplicated genes from this extra WGD exhibited distinct functional divergence in response to salt stress. This WGD, therefore, contributed to the strong resistance to salt stress and widespread arid adaptation of A. splendens.
Keywords: Achnatherum splendens; genome assembly; stress tolerance; transcriptome; whole-genome duplication.
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