Whole-genome sequencing of cultivated and wild peppers provides insights into Capsicum domestication and specialization
South China Agricultural University · Sichuan Agricultural University · +9 more institutions
Abstract
As an economic crop, pepper satisfies people's spicy taste and has medicinal uses worldwide. To gain a better understanding of Capsicum evolution, domestication, and specialization, we present here the genome sequence of the cultivated pepper Zunla-1 (C. annuum L.) and its wild progenitor Chiltepin (C. annuum var. glabriusculum). We estimate that the pepper genome expanded ∼0.3 Mya (with respect to the genome of other Solanaceae) by a rapid amplification of retrotransposons elements, resulting in a genome comprised of ∼81% repetitive sequences. Approximately 79% of 3.48-Gb scaffolds containing 34,476 protein-coding genes were anchored to chromosomes by a high-density genetic map. Comparison of cultivated and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 71.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
73Topics & keywords
- Domestication
- Biology
- Pepper
- Genome
- Crop
- Genetic divergence
- Capsicum annuum
- Biotechnology
- Zero hunger