The genomes of seven economic Caesalpinioideae trees provide insights into polyploidization history and secondary metabolite biosynthesis

The Caesalpinioideae subfamily contains many well-known trees that are important for economic sustainability and human health, but a lack of genomic resources has hindered their breeding and utilization. Here, we present chromosome-level reference genomes for the two food and industrial trees Gledit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant communications 2024-09, Vol.5 (9), p.100944, Article 100944
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Rong, Meng, Sihan, Wang, Anqi, Jiang, Fan, Yuan, Lihua, Lei, Lihong, Wang, Hengchao, Fan, Wei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Caesalpinioideae subfamily contains many well-known trees that are important for economic sustainability and human health, but a lack of genomic resources has hindered their breeding and utilization. Here, we present chromosome-level reference genomes for the two food and industrial trees Gleditsia sinensis (921 Mb) and Biancaea sappan (872 Mb), the three shade and ornamental trees Albizia julibrissin (705 Mb), Delonix regia (580 Mb), and Acacia confusa (566 Mb), and the two pioneer and hedgerow trees Leucaena leucocephala (1338 Mb) and Mimosa bimucronata (641 Mb). Phylogenetic inference shows that the mimosoid clade has a much higher evolutionary rate than the other clades of Caesalpinioideae. Macrosynteny comparison suggests that the fusion and breakage of an unstable chromosome are responsible for the difference in basic chromosome number (13 or 14) for Caesalpinioideae. After an ancient whole-genome duplication (WGD) shared by all Caesalpinioideae species (CWGD, ∼72.0 million years ago [MYA]), there were two recent successive WGD events, LWGD-1 (16.2–19.5 MYA) and LWGD-2 (7.1–9.5 MYA), in L. leucocephala. Thereafter, ∼40% gene loss and genome-size contraction have occurred during the diploidization process in L. leucocephala. To investigate secondary metabolites, we identified all gene copies involved in mimosine metabolism in these species and found that the abundance of mimosine biosynthesis genes in L. leucocephala largely explains its high mimosine production. We also identified the set of all potential genes involved in triterpenoid saponin biosynthesis in G. sinensis, which is more complete than that based on previous transcriptome-derived unigenes. Our results and genomic resources will facilitate biological studies of Caesalpinioideae and promote the utilization of valuable secondary metabolites. This study reports chromosome-level genome assemblies of seven Caesalpinioideae species: Gleditsia sinensis, Biancaea sappan, Albizia julibrissin, Delonix regia, Acacia confusa, Leucaena leucocephala, and Mimosa bimucronata. It presents phylogeny, palaeo-polyploidization, and macrosynteny analyses, that provides insights into polyploidization history and chromosome evolution in the Caesalpinioideae subfamily, and the identification of a comprehensive set of genes potentially involved in mimosine metabolism and triterpenoid saponin biosynthesis.
ISSN:2590-3462
2590-3462
DOI:10.1016/j.xplc.2024.100944