A reference-quality, fully annotated genome from a Puerto Rican individual

Until 2019, the human genome was available in only one fully-annotated version, which was the result of 18 years of continuous improvement and revision. Despite dramatic improvements in sequencing technology, no other individual human genome was available as an annotated reference until 2019, when the genome of an Ashkenazi individual was released. In this study, we describe the assembly and annotation of a second individual genome, from a Puerto Rican individual whose DNA was collected as part of the Human Pangenome project.

The new genome, called PR1, is the first true reference genome created from an individual of African descent. Due to recent improvements in both sequencing and assembly technology, PR1 is more complete and more contiguous than either the human reference genome (GRCh38) or the Ashkenazi genome. Annotation revealed 42,217 genes (of which 20,168 are protein-coding), including 107 additional gene copies that are present in PR1 and missing from GRCh38. 180 genes have fewer copies in PR1 than in GRCh38, 13 map only partially, and 3 genes (1 protein-coding) from GRCh38 are entirely missing from PR1.

Authors: Aleksey V. Zimin, Alaina Shumate, Ida Shinder, Jakob Heinz, Daniela Puiu, Mihaela Pertea, Steven L. Salzberg