Syntenic dotplot of peach versus grape

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Syntenic dotplot of Prunus persica (peach; x-axis) and Vitis vinifera (grapevine; y-axis). Syntenic gene pairs have been colored based on their Ks values. Results can be regenerated at http://genomevolution.org/CoGe/SynMap.pl?dsgid1=8400;dsgid2=43;c=4;D=20;g=10;A=5;Dm=0;gm=;w=0;b=1;ft1=1;ft2=1;ma=1;do1=1;do2=1;do=40;dt=geneorder;ks=1;am=g


Whole genome syntenic comparison of peach tree's genome to grapevine's shows extensive synteny where each region of each genome matching one other region very well, and two other regions less well. While the colors are a bit difficult to differentiate in this image, the better matching regions are a deeper red, signifying a lower Ks value. These regions are derived from the divergence of these lineages are are orthologs, the other regions being out-paralogous and derived from their shared eudicot paleohexaploidy event.

This analysis also shows that peach, like grapevine, has not undergone a subsequent whole genome duplication event. Overall, the structure of these genomes is very similar as evidenced by the large syntenic orthologous regions. However, peachtree's lower chromosome number is likely due to chromosome fusion events of chomosomes that have mostly remained separated in grapevine.