Two telomere-to-telomere gapless genomes reveal insights into Capsicum evolution and capsaicinoid biosynthesis

Chili pepper ( Capsicum ) is known for its unique fruit pungency due to the presence of capsaicinoids. The evolutionary history of capsaicinoid biosynthesis and the mechanism of their tissue specificity remain obscure due to the lack of high-quality Capsicum genomes. Here, we report two telomere-to-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-05, Vol.15 (1), p.4295-4295, Article 4295
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Weikai, Wang, Xiangfeng, Sun, Jie, Wang, Xinrui, Zhu, Zhangsheng, Ayhan, Dilay Hazal, Yi, Shu, Yan, Ming, Zhang, Lili, Meng, Tan, Mu, Yu, Li, Jun, Meng, Dian, Bian, Jianxin, Wang, Ke, Wang, Lu, Chen, Shaoying, Chen, Ruidong, Jin, Jingyun, Li, Bosheng, Zhang, Xingping, Deng, Xing Wang, He, Hang, Guo, Li
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chili pepper ( Capsicum ) is known for its unique fruit pungency due to the presence of capsaicinoids. The evolutionary history of capsaicinoid biosynthesis and the mechanism of their tissue specificity remain obscure due to the lack of high-quality Capsicum genomes. Here, we report two telomere-to-telomere (T2T) gap-free genomes of C. annuum and its wild nonpungent relative C. rhomboideum to investigate the evolution of fruit pungency in chili peppers. We precisely delineate Capsicum centromeres, which lack high-copy tandem repeats but are extensively invaded by CRM retrotransposons. Through phylogenomic analyses, we estimate the evolutionary timing of capsaicinoid biosynthesis. We reveal disrupted coding and regulatory regions of key biosynthesis genes in nonpungent species. We also find conserved placenta-specific accessible chromatin regions, which likely allow for tissue-specific biosynthetic gene coregulation and capsaicinoid accumulation. These T2T genomic resources will accelerate chili pepper genetic improvement and help to understand Capsicum genome evolution. Chili pepper ( Capsicum ) is an important vegetables known for fruit pungency given by capsaicinoids. Here, the authors assemble the telomere-to-telomere genomes of a pungent pepper C. annuum and its non-pungent wild relative C. rhomboideum and reveal insights into Capsicum evolution and capsaicinoid biosynthesis.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-48643-0