CIRAD Agricultural research for devlopement
  • Version française
  • Intranet
Quick search
  • News
  • Jobs
  • Directory/Access
  • Who are we?
    • In a nutshell
    • Organization
    • Our mandate
    • Our strategy
    • Our partnerships
    • CIRAD worldwide
    • Our values
  • Research operations
    • Priority lines of research
    • Research Topics
    • Supply chains
    • Research units
    • Collective research tools
    • Research results
  • Teaching & training
    • Higher education
    • Available training
    • Scientific experience
    • E-learning
  • Innovation & expertise
    • Partnerships for innovation
    • Skills and expertise
    • Products and services
    • Technology transfer
    • The CIRAD VIP newsletter
  • Publications & resources
    • Documentary resources
    • Publications
    • Science for all
    • Vidéos
    • Photothèque
    • Website Directory
  • You are here:
  • Home >
  • News >
  • All news items >
  • Sequencing of the banana genome

Back to the list
Inflorescence of the banana

For further information

  • The Genoscope website
  • The ANR website
  • The Global Musa Genomics Consortium website

Research units

Genetic Improvement and Adaptation of Mediterranean and Tropical Plants

Contact

Scientists

CIRAD
Angélique D’Hont
Montpellier, France
E-mail

GENOSCOPE - CEA
Patrick Wincker
Evry, France
E-mail

Press officer

CIRAD
Florence Vigier
Montpellier, France
E-mail

CEA
Tuline LAESER
Saclay, France
E-mail

  • All news items
  • Events
  • Newsletter

The banana genome has been sequenced

11/07/2012 - Press release

Banana has revealed the secrets of its 520 million bases. Two French research organizations, CIRAD and CEA-Genoscope, with funding from the National Research Agency (ANR), have just finished, in two years, sequencing the species Musa acuminata which is a component in every edible variety (dessert and cooking bananas). This work is a huge step towards understanding the genetics of and improving banana varieties, and was done within the framework of the Global Musa Genomics Consortium. The results will be published on line on Wednesday 11 July 2012 in the prestigious scientific journal Nature .

An essential varietal improvement tool

Bananas are vitally important for the food and economic security of more than 400 million people in southern countries, but are under constant pressure from a range of parasites. That pressure is particularly high in plantations producing the “export” bananas we find in our supermarkets. It is therefore crucial to develop new, more resistant varieties, although this is a complex operation given the very low fertility of cultivated banana varieties.

The newly available genome sequence provides access to each and every one of the plant’s genes – more than 36 000 of them – and to their position on its eleven chromosomes. This knowledge will make it much easier to identify the genes responsible for characters such as disease resistance and fruit quality. Lastly, it will be a vital tool for improving banana varieties using the many genetic resources available worldwide.

A new view of genome evolution

Banana is the first plant in its botanical class (monocotyledons), alongside cereals, for which whole genome sequencing (anchored on the chromosomes) has been achieved. As such, it is a highly valuable reference for use in studying genome evolution. For instance, researchers have been able to establish that banana has seen three episodes of complete genome duplication, independent of those seen in grasses. While most of the genes resulting from such events are generally lost, some persist and lead to the emergence of new biological functions. Researchers have already identified certain regulatory factors (transition factors), which are particularly numerous in banana and contribute to important processes such as fruit ripening.

This work was conducted with financial support from the French National Research Agency (ANR).

The banana genome sequence is freely available on the following website: http://banana-genome.cirad.fr.

Bibliographical reference

‘The banana (Musa acuminata) genome and the evolution of monocotyledonous plants’ 10.1038/nature11241. Advance Online Publication (AOP) on http://www.nature.com/nature

Read also

CIRAD is tackling the complete sequencing of the banana genome (News, 11/09/2009)

  • Category: Science

  • © CIRAD 2009
  • Site map
  • RSS feed
  • Legal details
  • Public procurement