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. 2023 Aug 10;9(9):1558–1571. doi: 10.1038/s41477-023-01489-8

Extended Data Fig. 9. Comparison of RPM1-like locus and Cytochrome P450  loci in LAB and QLD with other Solanaceae.

Extended Data Fig. 9

(a) Synteny of RPM1-like loci in tomato, N. attenuata, N.tabacum, LAB and QLD. (b) Synteny of a terpene biosynthesis pathway Cytochrome P450 locus in N. attenuata, LAB and QLD. Gene arrangement in cartoon form representing RPM1-like bacterial resistance genes  and CYP736A-like genes (functional - bright green), possibly functional (dark green), defective/pseudogenes (blue). In (A), distances between genes indicated (black text)< 15kbp; (red text) >15kbp and surrounding syntenic genes in are shown in orange, purple, yellow and brown. Orthology/homology relationships are indicated by coloured shading. In (B), distances between genes indicated (black text)< 50kbp; (red text) >50kbp. TE annotation tracks for LAB and QLD were prepared using annotation data from the EDTA TE annotation pipeline (see online Methods) and Geneious Prime software (Geneious Prime 2023.0.1; https://www.geneious.com). Only LTR-transposable elements are shown. Yellow blocks represent GYPSY elements and green blocks represent COPIA elements. The size of each block is proportional to the number of base-pairs annotated for that element. Red triangles represent LTR repeat regions that flank either a GYPSY or COPIA element. These elements are likely to be nearly complete and can be considered possible autonomous elements. The rectangular red blocks flank unknown LTR-TE elements. Unknown TEs are elements that are recognized as an LTR element but are not able to be classified as either a COPIA or GYPSY element due to irregularities in internal sequences for that element. These are likely to represent non-autonomous elements. Those elements not flanked by LTR sequences are highly fragmented nonfunctional elements. The blue rectangular boxes highlight the location of the genes annotated in the tracks above and below the TE annotation tracks.