1. The Chromosome-Based Rubber Tree Genome Provides New Insights into Spurge Genome Evolution and Rubber Biosynthesis.
- Author
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Liu J, Shi C, Shi CC, Li W, Zhang QJ, Zhang Y, Li K, Lu HF, Shi C, Zhu ST, Xiao ZY, Nan H, Yue Y, Zhu XG, Wu Y, Hong XN, Fan GY, Tong Y, Zhang D, Mao CL, Liu YL, Hao SJ, Liu WQ, Lv MQ, Zhang HB, Liu Y, Hu-Tang GR, Wang JP, Wang JH, Sun YH, Ni SB, Chen WB, Zhang XC, Jiao YN, Eichler EE, Li GH, Liu X, and Gao LZ
- Subjects
- Chromosome Mapping, Domestication, Euphorbia classification, Euphorbia genetics, Euphorbia metabolism, Hevea classification, Hevea metabolism, Multigene Family, Plant Proteins genetics, Plant Proteins metabolism, Retroelements, Tetraploidy, Chromosomes, Plant genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Genome, Plant genetics, Hevea genetics, Rubber metabolism
- Abstract
The rubber tree, Hevea brasiliensis, produces natural rubber that serves as an essential industrial raw material. Here, we present a high-quality reference genome for a rubber tree cultivar GT1 using single-molecule real-time sequencing (SMRT) and Hi-C technologies to anchor the ∼1.47-Gb genome assembly into 18 pseudochromosomes. The chromosome-based genome analysis enabled us to establish a model of spurge chromosome evolution, since the common paleopolyploid event occurred before the split of Hevea and Manihot. We show recent and rapid bursts of the three Hevea-specific LTR-retrotransposon families during the last 10 million years, leading to the massive expansion by ∼65.88% (∼970 Mbp) of the whole rubber tree genome since the divergence from Manihot. We identify large-scale expansion of genes associated with whole rubber biosynthesis processes, such as basal metabolic processes, ethylene biosynthesis, and the activation of polysaccharide and glycoprotein lectin, which are important properties for latex production. A map of genomic variation between the cultivated and wild rubber trees was obtained, which contains ∼15.7 million high-quality single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We identified hundreds of candidate domestication genes with drastically lowered genomic diversity in the cultivated but not wild rubber trees despite a relatively short domestication history of rubber tree, some of which are involved in rubber biosynthesis. This genome assembly represents key resources for future rubber tree research and breeding, providing novel targets for improving plant biotic and abiotic tolerance and rubber production., (Copyright © 2019 The Author. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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