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Chromosome‐level genome of putative autohexaploid Actinidia deliciosa provides insights into polyploidisation and evolution.

Authors :
Liu, Yongbo
Zhou, Yi
Cheng, Feng
Zhou, Renchao
Yang, Yinqing
Wang, Yanchang
Zhang, Xingtan
Soltis, Douglas E.
Xiao, Nengwen
Quan, Zhanjun
Li, Junsheng
Source :
Plant Journal; Apr2024, Vol. 118 Issue 1, p73-89, 17p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

SUMMARY: Actinidia ('Mihoutao' in Chinese) includes species with complex ploidy, among which diploid Actinidia chinensis and hexaploid Actinidia deliciosa are economically and nutritionally important fruit crops. Actinidia deliciosa has been proposed to be an autohexaploid (2n = 174) with diploid A. chinensis (2n = 58) as the putative parent. A CCS‐based assembly anchored to a high‐resolution linkage map provided a chromosome‐resolved genome for hexaploid A. deliciosa yielded a 3.91‐Gb assembly of 174 pseudochromosomes comprising 29 homologous groups with 6 members each, which contain 39 854 genes with an average of 4.57 alleles per gene. Here we provide evidence that much of the hexaploid genome matches diploid A. chinensis; 95.5% of homologous gene pairs exhibited >90% similarity. However, intragenome and intergenome comparisons of synteny indicate chromosomal changes. Our data, therefore, indicate that if A. deliciosa is an autoploid, chromosomal rearrangement occurred following autohexaploidy. A highly diversified pattern of gene expression and a history of rapid population expansion after polyploidisation likely facilitated the adaptation and niche differentiation of A. deliciosa in nature. The allele‐defined hexaploid genome of A. deliciosa provides new genomic resources to accelerate crop improvement and to understand polyploid genome evolution. Significance Statement: We provide insights into the origin of the hexaploid crop Actinidia deliciosa—a putative autohexaploid. Our data suggest chromosomal rearrangements—indicating that either the species is a segmental allopolyploid, or if a strict autoploid then chromosomal rearrangement occurred following autohexaploidy. Our work also provides a template for the study of high ploidal level (6x genome) auto or segmental alloploid genomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09607412
Volume :
118
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176335235
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.16592