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The first homosporous lycophyte genome revealed the association between the recent dynamic accumulation of LTR-RTs and genome size variation.

Authors :
Yu, Ji-Gao
Tang, Jun-Yong
Wei, Ran
Lan, Mei-Fang
Xiang, Rui-Chen
Zhang, Xian-Chun
Xiang, Qiao-Ping
Source :
Plant Molecular Biology; Aug2023, Vol. 112 Issue 6, p325-340, 16p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The contrasting genome size between homosporous and heterosporous plants is fascinating. Different from the heterosporous seed plants and mainly homosporous ferns, the lycophytes are either heterosporous (Isoetales and Selaginellales) or homosporous (Lycopodiales). Many lycophytes are the resource plants of Huperzine A (HupA) which is invaluable for treating Alzheimer's disease. For the seed-free vascular plants, several high-quality genomes of heterosporous Selaginella, homosporous ferns (maidenhair fern, monkey spider tree fern), and heterosporous ferns (Azolla) have been published and provided important insights into the origin and evolution of early land plants. However, the homosporous lycophyte genome has not been decoded. Here, we assembled the first homosporous lycophyte genome and conducted comparative genomic analyses by applying a reformed pipeline for filtering out non-plant sequences. The obtained genome size of Lycopodium clavatum is 2.30 Gb, distinguished in more than 85% repetitive elements of which 62% is long terminal repeat (LTR). This study disclosed a high birth rate and a low death rate of the LTR-RTs in homosporous lycophytes, but the opposite occurs in heterosporous lycophytes. we propose that the recent activity of LTR-RT is responsible for the immense genome size variation between homosporous and heterosporous lycophytes. By combing Ks analysis with a phylogenetic approach, we discovered two whole genome duplications (WGD). Morover, we identified all the five recognized key enzymes for the HupA biosynthetic pathway in the L. clavatum genome, but found this pathway incomplete in other major lineages of land plants. Overall, this study is of great importance for the medicinal utilization of lycophytes and the decoded genome data will be a key cornerstone to elucidate the evolution and biology of early vascular land plants. Key message: The first homosporous lycophyte genome of Lycopodium clavatum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01674412
Volume :
112
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant Molecular Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169808563
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11103-023-01366-0