Abstract
The domestic pig (Sus scrofa) is important both as a food source and as a biomedical model with high anatomical and immunological similarity to humans. The draft reference genome (Sscrofa10.2) of a purebred Duroc female pig established using older clone-based sequencing methods was incomplete and unresolved redundancies, short range order and orientation errors and associated misassembled genes limited its utility. We present two annotated highly contiguous chromosome-level genome assemblies created with more recent long read technologies and a whole genome shotgun strategy, one for the same Duroc female (Sscrofa11.1) and one for an outbred, composite breed male (USMARCv1.0). Both assemblies are of substantially higher (>90-fold) continuity and accuracy than Sscrofa10.2. These highly contiguous assemblies plus annotation of a further 11 short read assemblies provide an unprecedented view of the genetic make-up of this important agricultural and biomedical model species. We propose that the improved Duroc assembly (Sscrofa11.1) become the reference genome for genomic research in pigs.
Footnotes
↵† Mater Research Institute-University of Queensland, Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, QLD 4102, Australia
This version of the manuscript has been revised to include updated Ensembl annotation of Sscrofa11.1 and to report annotation of a further eleven short read pig genome assemblies (summarised in a new supplementary table). The description of the Ensembl annotation pipeline has been revised. Some supplementary tables have been removed.