Wolfberry genomes and the evolution of Lycium (Solanaceae)
Wolfberry Lycium , an economically important genus of the Solanaceae family, contains approximately 80 species and shows a fragmented distribution pattern among the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Although several herbaceous species of Solanaceae have been subjected to genome sequencing, thus far...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Communications biology 2021-06, Vol.4 (1), p.671-671, Article 671 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Wolfberry
Lycium
, an economically important genus of the Solanaceae family, contains approximately 80 species and shows a fragmented distribution pattern among the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Although several herbaceous species of Solanaceae have been subjected to genome sequencing, thus far, no genome sequences of woody representatives have been available. Here, we sequenced the genomes of 13 perennial woody species of
Lycium
, with a focus on
Lycium barbarum
. Integration with other genomes provides clear evidence supporting a whole-genome triplication (WGT) event shared by all hitherto sequenced solanaceous plants, which occurred shortly after the divergence of Solanaceae and Convolvulaceae. We identified new gene families and gene family expansions and contractions that first appeared in Solanaceae. Based on the identification of self-incompatibility related-gene families, we inferred that hybridization hotspots are enriched for genes that might be functioning in gametophytic self-incompatibility pathways in wolfberry. Extremely low expression of
LOCULE NUBER
(
LC
) and
COLORLESS NON-RIPENING
(
CNR
) orthologous genes during
Lycium
fruit development and ripening processes suggests functional diversification of these two genes between
Lycium
and tomato. The existence of additional
flowering locus C-like
MADS-box genes might correlate with the perennial flowering cycle of
Lycium
. Differential gene expression involved in the lignin biosynthetic pathway between
Lycium
and tomato likely illustrates woody and herbaceous differentiation. We also provide evidence that
Lycium
migrated from Africa into Asia, and subsequently from Asia into North America. Our results provide functional insights into Solanaceae origins, evolution and diversification.
Cao, Li, et al. sequence 13 perennial woody plant species of
Lycium
, and specifically provide a draft assembly of
L. ruthenicum
and a chromosome-level assembly of
L. barbarum
, the wolfberry or Goji berry. From a phylogenetic tree the authors identify an ancient hexaploidization event, and report the evolution of gene families including fruit ripening, fruit coloration, polysaccharide synthesis and self-incompatibility within Solanaceae and the general biogeography of
L. barbarum
. |
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ISSN: | 2399-3642 2399-3642 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s42003-021-02152-8 |