The red flower wintersweet genome provides insights into the evolution of magnoliids and the molecular mechanism for tepal color development |
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Authors: | Zhiguo Shen Wenying Li Yanli Li Meilan Liu Heping Cao Nicholas Provart Xin Ding Meng Sun Zhenghui Tang Changping Yue Yunpeng Cao Deyi Yuan Lin Zhang |
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Affiliation: | 1. Key Laboratory of Cultivation and Protection for Non-Wood Forest Trees, Ministry of Education, Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha, Hunan, 410004 People’s Republic of China;2. US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Southern Regional Research Center, New Orleans, LA, 70124 USA;3. Department of Cell and Systems Biology/Centre for the Analysis of Genome Evolution and Function, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5S 3B2 Canada;4. National Innovation Alliance of Wintersweet, Henan Academy of Forestry, Zhengzhou, Henan, 450008 People’s Republic of China;5. Forestry Research Institute of Yanling County, Xuchang, Henan, 461200 People’s Republic of China |
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Abstract: | Wintersweet (Chimonanthus praecox) is one of the most important ornamental plants. Its color is mainly determined by the middle tepals. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the intriguing flower color development among different wintersweet groups are still largely unknown. In addition, wintersweet belongs to magnoliids, and the phylogenetic position of magnoliids remains to be determined conclusively. Here, the whole genome of red flower wintersweet, a new wintersweet type, was sequenced and assembled with high quality. The genome comprised 11 super-scaffolds (chromosomes) with a total size of 737.03 Mb. Based on the analyses of the long branch attraction, incomplete lineage sorting, sparse taxon sampling, and other factors, we suggest that a bifurcating tree may not fully represent the complex early diversification of the angiosperms and that magnoliids are most likely sister to the eudicots. The wintersweet genome appears to have undergone two whole-genome duplication (WGD) events: a recent WGD event representing an independent event specific to the Calycanthaceae and an ancient WGD event shared by Laurales. By integrating genomic, transcriptomic, and metabolomic data, CpANS1 and the transcription factor CpMYB1 were found to play key roles in regulating tepal color development, whereas CpMYB1 needs to form a complex with bHLH and WD40 to fully perform its regulatory function. The present study not only provides novel insights into the evolution of magnoliids and the molecular mechanism for flower color development, but also lays the foundation for subsequent functional genomics study and molecular breeding of wintersweet. |
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Keywords: | Chimonanthus praecox genome magnoliid evolution flower color development MYB transcription factor |
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