1. Sequencing of Cultivated Peanut, Arachis hypogaea, Yields Insights into Genome Evolution and Oil Improvement
- Author
-
Shaoxiong Li, Xuanqiang Liang, Zhong-Jian Liu, Xingyu Li, Fanbo Meng, Andrew H. Paterson, Haofa Lan, Rajeev K. Varshney, Zhikang Zhang, Kadambot H. M. Siddique, Yanbin Hong, Jinpeng Wang, Shanlin Yu, Guo-Qiang Zhang, Shijie Wen, Manish K. Pandey, Jiaqing Yuan, Xiaoping Chen, Haifen Li, Qing Lu, Jigao Yu, Xiyin Wang, Guiyuan Zhou, Jianan Zhang, Hao Liu, and Haiyan Liu
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Genome evolution ,Arachis ,Plant Science ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Arachis duranensis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Arachis ipaensis ,Lipid biosynthesis ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,Comparative genomics ,Genetics ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,biology ,Hypogaea ,food and beverages ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Lipid Metabolism ,biology.organism_classification ,Arachis hypogaea ,030104 developmental biology ,Peanut Oil ,Transcriptome ,Genome, Plant ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Cultivated peanut (Arachis hypogaea) is an allotetraploid crop planted in Asia, Africa, and America for edible oil and protein. To explore the origins and consequences of tetraploidy, we sequenced the allotetraploid A. hypogaea genome and compared it with the related diploid Arachis duranensis and Arachis ipaensis genomes. We annotated 39 888 A-subgenome genes and 41 526 B-subgenome genes in allotetraploid peanut. The A. hypogaea subgenomes have evolved asymmetrically, with the B subgenome resembling the ancestral state and the A subgenome undergoing more gene disruption, loss, conversion, and transposable element proliferation, and having reduced gene expression during seed development despite lacking genome-wide expression dominance. Genomic and transcriptomic analyses identified more than 2 500 oil metabolism-related genes and revealed that most of them show altered expression early in seed development while their expression ceases during desiccation, presenting a comprehensive map of peanut lipid biosynthesis. The availability of these genomic resources will facilitate a better understanding of the complex genome architecture, agronomically and economically important genes, and genetic improvement of peanut.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF