Difference between revisions of "Cannabis sativa cultivar Chemdawg (marijuana)"

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(Created page with 'This genome was sequenced by [http://www.medicinalgenomics.com/ Medicinal Genomics] (located in the Netherlands). It was sequenced with one lane of the Illumina HiSeq (2x100) pl...')
 
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== [[Syntenic path assembly]] and syntenic dotplots of the Cannabis sativa (marijuana) v. Prunus persica (peach) ==
 
== [[Syntenic path assembly]] and syntenic dotplots of the Cannabis sativa (marijuana) v. Prunus persica (peach) ==
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[[SynMap]] has the ability to tile a contig level assembly against any other genome in CoGe using synteny.  These [[pseudoassemblies]] can be printed out and then reloaded into CoGe.  By having such high-order assemblies, as unreal and inaccurate as they are to the actual genome structure of an organism, permits using CoGe's other tools to rapidly compare genomic regions.
  
 
<gallery widths =500px heights=500px compation="Syntenic Path Assembly in SynMap of two genomes in the order Rosales" perrow=2>
 
<gallery widths =500px heights=500px compation="Syntenic Path Assembly in SynMap of two genomes in the order Rosales" perrow=2>
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File:Master 12259 8400.genomic-CDS.lastz.dag.go c4 D20 g10 A5.aligncoords.gcoords ct0.w500.cs1.csoN.nsd.png|Syntenic dotplot by [SynMap].  X-axis Cannabis sativa (marijuana); Y-axis Prunus persica (peach).  The Cannabis genome was [[pseudoassembled]] against the peach genome using [[SynMap]]'s [[Syntenic path assembly]] algorithm.  The assembled genome was reloaded into CoGe and compared against the peach genome.  Results may be regenerated: http://genomevolution.org/r/3x1o
 
File:Master 12259 8400.genomic-CDS.lastz.dag.go c4 D20 g10 A5.aligncoords.gcoords ct0.w500.cs1.csoN.nsd.png|Syntenic dotplot by [SynMap].  X-axis Cannabis sativa (marijuana); Y-axis Prunus persica (peach).  The Cannabis genome was [[pseudoassembled]] against the peach genome using [[SynMap]]'s [[Syntenic path assembly]] algorithm.  The assembled genome was reloaded into CoGe and compared against the peach genome.  Results may be regenerated: http://genomevolution.org/r/3x1o
 
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== [[GEvo]] analysis of pseudoassembly of Cannabis genome to peach ==

Revision as of 14:11, 23 August 2011

This genome was sequenced by Medicinal Genomics (located in the Netherlands). It was sequenced with one lane of the Illumina HiSeq (2x100) platform and assembled with CLCbio’s workbench. Additional information about the assembly and genome may be found: http://www.medicinalgenomics.com/the-c-sativa-genome/

Cannabis is a member of the plant order Rosales. Of sequenced genomes in that order, the peach genome is a fantastic comparator. The reason for this is due to its high-quality sequence and assembly, along with its genomic evolutionary history that does not contain any subsequent whole genome duplication event to the eudicot paleohexaploidy shared by nearly all dicots (at least the eurosids and the astrids). As such, its genome structure is probably very similar the common ancestor of order Rosales, and perhaps the eudicots as a whole. This likely ancestral state of its genome makes it quite suitable for generating a pseudoassembly of highly fractured, low quality genome assemblies such as this Cannabis genome. CoGe's tool SynMap has an algorithm to tile contigs along any other "reference" genome in CoGe.

The Syntenic path assembly of Cannabis to the peach genome may be viewed: http://genomevolution.org/wiki/index.php/Syntenic_path_assembly#Cannabis_sativa_.28marijuana.29_v._Prunus_persica_.28peach.29

This shows the Cannabis genome sequence contains nearly the entire gene content of Peach.

Syntenic path assembly and syntenic dotplots of the Cannabis sativa (marijuana) v. Prunus persica (peach)

SynMap has the ability to tile a contig level assembly against any other genome in CoGe using synteny. These pseudoassemblies can be printed out and then reloaded into CoGe. By having such high-order assemblies, as unreal and inaccurate as they are to the actual genome structure of an organism, permits using CoGe's other tools to rapidly compare genomic regions.

GEvo analysis of pseudoassembly of Cannabis genome to peach