Genomes of Iris
Chat gpt answer to
- What irises have had their genome analyzed?
Genome sequencing in Iris is still relatively sparse compared to many crop plants, but several species do have sequenced genomes (either full nuclear genomes or plastid genomes). Hereβs a clear breakdown.
π± Irises with whole (nuclear) genome assemblies
These are the most complete and informative genome analyses:
*Iris pallida*
One of the first large, high-quality nuclear genome assemblies (~10 Gb)
Pub Med
*Iris domestica*
Chromosome-level genome assembly (very high quality) with functional gene studies
Science Direct. December 1, 2025
*Iris sibirica*
*Iris virginica*
Complete genome sequences published (assembled from Illumina data) [[ ][Biodiversity Genomes, March 2023]=
π These are currently among the best genomic references for the genus.
πΏ Irises with plastid (chloroplast) genomes
Plastid genomes are much smaller and were sequenced earlier and more widely:
Among the earliest plastid genomes sequenced in Iris
Iris orchioides
Complete plastid genome with comparison across ~20 species
~14 Korean-native Iris species (various taxa)
Pub Med, October 25, 2020
Plastid genomes sequenced for phylogenetic work
π Plastid genomes are commonly used for:
phylogeny
species identification
evolutionary studies
πΈ Irises with transcriptomes (partial genome-level data)
Not full genomes, but still important:
Iris atropurpurea
Transcriptome (expressed genes) sequenced for developmental and evolutionary studies
π§ Big picture
The genus Iris has ~300 species, but only a small fraction have full nuclear genomes
Many more species have:
plastid genomes
transcriptomes
Large genome sizes (often very big and repetitive) have slowed sequencing efforts.
βοΈ Summary
Fully sequenced nuclear genomes (key species):
Iris pallida
Iris domestica
Iris sibirica
Iris virginica
Plastid genomes (many species):
Iris gatesii, Iris sanguinea, Iris orchioides, + ~14 Korean species
Partial datasets:
Iris atropurpurea (transcriptome)
If you want, I can list all Iris species with any genomic data in
GenBank or break it down by subgenus (e.g., bearded vs. beardless irises).
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BobPries - 17 Mar 2026