- Garsmeur, Olivier;
- Droc, Gaetan;
- Antonise, Rudie;
- Grimwood, Jane;
- Potier, Bernard;
- Aitken, Karen;
- Jenkins, Jerry;
- Martin, Guillaume;
- Charron, Carine;
- Hervouet, Catherine;
- Costet, Laurent;
- Yahiaoui, Nabila;
- Healey, Adam;
- Sims, David;
- Cherukuri, Yesesri;
- Sreedasyam, Avinash;
- Kilian, Andrzej;
- Chan, Agnes;
- Van Sluys, Marie-Anne;
- Swaminathan, Kankshita;
- Town, Christopher;
- Bergès, Hélène;
- Simmons, Blake;
- Glaszmann, Jean Christophe;
- van der Vossen, Edwin;
- Henry, Robert;
- Schmutz, Jeremy;
- D’Hont, Angélique
Sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) is a major crop for sugar and bioenergy production. Its highly polyploid, aneuploid, heterozygous, and interspecific genome poses major challenges for producing a reference sequence. We exploited colinearity with sorghum to produce a BAC-based monoploid genome sequence of sugarcane. A minimum tiling path of 4660 sugarcane BAC that best covers the gene-rich part of the sorghum genome was selected based on whole-genome profiling, sequenced, and assembled in a 382-Mb single tiling path of a high-quality sequence. A total of 25,316 protein-coding gene models are predicted, 17% of which display no colinearity with their sorghum orthologs. We show that the two species, S. officinarum and S. spontaneum, involved in modern cultivars differ by their transposable elements and by a few large chromosomal rearrangements, explaining their distinct genome size and distinct basic chromosome numbers while also suggesting that polyploidization arose in both lineages after their divergence.