Rhizophagus irregularis str. A1 (ASM159312v1)

Rhizophagus irregularis str. A1 Assembly and Gene Annotation

About Rhizophagus irregularis str. A1

Rhizophagus irregularis (previously known as Glomus intraradices) is an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus used as a soil inoculant in agriculture and horticulture. In addition, it is one of the best mycorrhizal varieties of fungi available to mycoforestry, but as it does not produce fruiting bodies it
"has virtually no market value as an edible or medicinal mushroom
"

Rhizophagus irregularis is also commonly used in scientific studies of the effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on plant and soil improvement.

Recent molecular analysis of Ribosomal DNA suggested that Glomus intraradices is not in fact in the genus Glomus at all, and should be renamed Rhizophagus intraradices.

(Text and image from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia.)

Assembly

The assembly presented is the ASM159312v1 assembly submitted to INSDC with the assembly accession GCA_001593125.1.

Annotation

The annotation presented is derived from annotation submitted to INSDC with the assembly accession GCA_001593125.1, with additional non-coding genes derived from Rfam. For more details, please visit INSDC annotation import.

More information

General information about this species can be found in Wikipedia.

Statistics

Summary

AssemblyASM159312v1, INSDC Assembly GCA_001593125.1,
Database version111.1
Golden Path Length125,353,551
Genebuild byUniversity of Ottawa
Genebuild methodImport
Data sourceUniversity of Ottawa

Gene counts

Coding genes26,476
Non coding genes104
Small non coding genes104
Pseudogenes2
Gene transcripts26,582