The genome of Cleistogenes songorica provides a blueprint for functional dissection of dimorphic flower differentiation and drought adaptability

发布时间:2020-11-02 字体大小 T |T

Title: The genome of Cleistogenes songorica provides a blueprint for functional dissection of dimorphic flower differentiation and drought adaptability

Authors: Jiyu Zhang, Fan Wu, Qi Yan, Ulrik P John, Mingshu Cao, Pan Xu, Zhengshe Zhang, Tiantian Ma,Xifang Zong, Jie Li, Ruijuan Liu, Yufei Zhang, Yufeng Zhao, Gisele Kanzana, Yanyan Lv, Zhibiao Nan,German Spangenberg, and Yanrong Wang

Journal: Plant Biotechnology Journal

Impact Factor: IF2019=8.154 (生物1)

Abstract: Cleistogenes songorica (2n = 4x = 40) is a desert grass with a unique dimorphic flowering mechanism and an ability to survive extreme drought. Little is known about the genetics underlying drought tolerance and its reproductive adaptability. Here, we sequenced and assembled a high-quality chromosome-level C. songorica genome (contig N50 = 21.28 Mb). Complete assemblies of all telomeres, and of ten chromosomes were derived. C. songorica underwent a recent tetraploidization (~ 19 million years ago), and four major chromosomal rearrangements. Expanded genes were significantly enriched in fatty acid elongation, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, starch and sucrose metabolism, and circadian rhythm pathways. By comparative transcriptomic analysis we found that conserved drought tolerance related genes were expanded. Transcription of CsMYB genes were associated with differential development of chasmogamous and cleistogamous flowers, as well as drought tolerance. Furthermore, we found that regulation modules encompassing miRNA, transcription factors and target genes are involved in dimorphic flower development, validated by overexpression of CsAP2_9 and its targeted miR172 in rice. Our findings enable further understanding of the mechanisms of drought tolerance and flowering in C. songorica, and provide new insights into the adaptability of native grass species in evolution, along with potential resources for trait improvement in agronomically important species.

链接https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/pbi.13483