The European Reference Genome Atlas: piloting a decentralised approach to equitable biodiversity genomics

Ann M Mc Cartney, Giulio Formenti,Alice Mouton, Diego De Panis,Luisa S Marins, Henrique G Leitao,Genevieve Diedericks, Joseph Kirangwa,Marco Morselli, Judit Salces, Nuria Escudero,Alessio Iannucci, Chiara Natali,Hannes Svardal, Rosa Fernandez,Tim De Pooter,Geert Joris, Mojca Strazisar, Jo Wood, Katie E Herron,Ole Seehausen, Phillip C Watts,Felix Shaw, Robert P Davey,Alice Minotto, Jose Maria Fernandez Gonzalez, Astrid Bohne, Carla Alegria, Tyler Alioto,Paulo C Alves, Isabel R Amorim,Jean-Marc Aury, Niclas Backstrom,Petr Baldrian, Loriano Ballarin,Laima Baltrunaite, Endre Barta, Bertrand BedHom,Caroline Belser, Johannes Bergsten,Laurie Bertrand, Helena Bilandija,Mahesh Binzer-Panchal, Iliana Bista,Mark Blaxter, Paulo AV Borges,Guilherme Borges Dias, Mirte Bosse, Tom Brown,Remy Bruggmann, Elena Buena-Atienza, Josephine Burgin,Elena Buzan, Alessia Cariani, Nicolas Casadei,Matteo Chiara, Sergio Chozas,Fedor Ciampor,Angelica Crottini, Corinne Cruaud,Fernando Cruz, Love Dalen,Alessio De Biase, Javier del Campo, Teo Delic, Alice B Dennis,Martijn FL Derks, Maria Angela Diroma,Mihajla Djan, Simone Duprat, Klara Eleftheriadi, Philine GD Feulner,Jean-Francois Flot, Giobbe Forni,Bruno Fosso, Pascal Fournier,Christine Fournier-Chambrillon, Toni Gabaldon,Shilpa Garg, Carmela Gissi,Luca Giupponi, Jessica Gomez-Garrido, Josefa Gonzalez, Miguel L Grilo, Bjoern Gruening, Thomas Guerin,Nadege Guiglielmoni, Marta Gut, Marcel P Haesler,Christoph Hahn, Balint Halpern,Peter Harrison, Julia Heintz, Maris Hindrikson,Jacob Hoglund, Kerstin Howe,Graham Hughes, Benjamin Istace,Mark J. Cock, Franc Jancekovic,Zophonias O Jonsson, Sagane Joye-Dind, Janne J. Koskimaki, Boris Krystufek, Justyna Kubacka, Heiner Kuhl, Szilvia Kusza, Karine Labadie, Meri Lahteenaro, Henrik Lantz, Anton Lavrinienko, Lucas Leclere, Ricardo Jorge Lopes, Ole Madsen, Ghislaine Magdelenat, Giulia Magoga, Tereza Manousaki, Tapio Mappes, Joao Pedro Marques, Gemma I Martinez Redondo,Florian Maumus, Shane A. McCarthy, Hendrik-Jan Megens,Jose Melo-Ferreira, Sofia L Mendes, Matteo Montagna, Joao Moreno, Mai-Britt Mosbech, Monica Moura, Zuzana Musilova, Eugene Myers, Will J. Nash, Alexander Nater, Pamela Nicholson, Manuel Niell, Reindert Nijland, Benjamin Noel,Karin Noren, Pedro H Oliveira, Remi-Andre Olsen, Lino Ometto,Rebekah A Oomen, Stephan Ossowski, Vaidas Palinauskas,Snaebjorn Palsson, Jerome P Panibe,Joana Pauperio, Martina Pavlek, Emilie Payen, Julia Pawlowska, Jaume Pellicer, Graziano Pesole, Joao Pimenta,Martin Pippel, Anna Maria Pirttila, Nikos Poulakakis, Jeena Rajan, Ruben MC Rego, Roberto Resendes, Philipp Resl, Ana Riesgo, Patrik Rodin-Morch, Andre ER Soares, Carlos Rodriguez Fernandes, Maria M. Romeiras, Guilherme Roxo, Lukas Ruber, Maria Jose Ruiz-Lopez, Urmas Saarma, Luis P Silva, Manuela Sim-Sim, Lucile Soler, Vitor C Sousa, Carla Sousa Santos, Alberto Spada, Milomir Stefanovic, Viktor Steger, Josefin Stiller, Matthias Stock, Torsten Hugo H Struck, Hiranya Sudasinghe, Riikka Tapanainen, Christian Tellgren-Roth, Helena Trindade, Yevhen Tukalenko, Ilenia Urso, Benoit Vacherie, Steven M Van Belleghem, Kees van Oers, Carlos Vargas-Chavez,Nevena Velickovic, Noel Vella, Adriana Vella,Cristiano Vernesi, Sara Vicente, Sara Villa, Olga Vinnere Pettersson, Filip AM Volckaert, Judit Voros,Patrick Wincker, Sylke Winkler,Claudio Ciofi, Robert M Waterhouse,Camila J Mazzoni

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
A global genome database of all of Earth’s species diversity could be a treasure trove of scientific discoveries. However, regardless of the major advances in genome sequencing technologies, only a tiny fraction of species have genomic information available. To contribute to a more complete planetary genomic database, scientists and institutions across the world have united under the Earth BioGenome Project (EBP), which plans to sequence and assemble high-quality reference genomes for all ∼1.5 million recognized eukaryotic species through a stepwise phased approach. As the initiative transitions into Phase II, where 150,000 species are to be sequenced in just four years, worldwide participation in the project will be fundamental to success. As the European node of the EBP, the European Reference Genome Atlas (ERGA) seeks to implement a new decentralised, accessible, equitable and inclusive model for producing high-quality reference genomes, which will inform EBP as it scales. To embark on this mission, ERGA launched a Pilot Project to establish a network across Europe to develop and test the first infrastructure of its kind for the coordinated and distributed reference genome production on 98 European eukaryotic species from sample providers across 33 European countries. Here we outline the process and challenges faced during the development of a pilot infrastructure for the production of reference genome resources, and explore the effectiveness of this approach in terms of high-quality reference genome production, considering also equity and inclusion. The outcomes and lessons learned during this pilot provide a solid foundation for ERGA while offering key learnings to other transnational and national genomic resource projects. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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