The Tarenaya hassleriana Genome Provides Insight into Reproductive Trait and Genome Evolution of Crucifers
Author(s) -
Shifeng Cheng,
Erik van den Bergh,
Peng Zeng,
Xiao Zhong,
Jiajia Xu,
Xin Liu,
Johannes A. Hofberger,
Suzanne de Bruijn,
Amey S. Bhide,
Canan Kuelahoglu,
Chao Bian,
Jing Chen,
Guangyi Fan,
Kerstin Kaufmann,
Jocelyn C. Hall,
Annette Becker,
Andrea Bräutigam,
Andreas P.M. Weber,
Chengcheng Shi,
Zhijun Zheng,
Wujiao Li,
Mingju Lv,
Yimin Tao,
Junyi Wang,
Hongfeng Zou,
Zhiwu Quan,
Julian M. Hibberd,
Gengyun Zhang,
XinGuang Zhu,
Xun Xu,
M. Eric Schranz
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.113.113480
Subject(s) - biology , genome , brassicaceae , brassica rapa , synteny , genetics , genome evolution , lineage (genetic) , gene family , gene duplication , gene , evolutionary biology , functional divergence , arabidopsis thaliana , botany , mutant
The Brassicaceae, including Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica crops, is unmatched among plants in its wealth of genomic and functional molecular data and has long served as a model for understanding gene, genome, and trait evolution. However, genome information from a phylogenetic outgroup that is essential for inferring directionality of evolutionary change has been lacking. We therefore sequenced the genome of the spider flower (Tarenaya hassleriana) from the Brassicaceae sister family, the Cleomaceae. By comparative analysis of the two lineages, we show that genome evolution following ancient polyploidy and gene duplication events affect reproductively important traits. We found an ancient genome triplication in Tarenaya (Th-α) that is independent of the Brassicaceae-specific duplication (At-α) and nested Brassica (Br-α) triplication. To showcase the potential of sister lineage genome analysis, we investigated the state of floral developmental genes and show Brassica retains twice as many floral MADS (for minichromosome maintenance1, AGAMOUS, DEFICIENS and serum response factor) genes as Tarenaya that likely contribute to morphological diversity in Brassica. We also performed synteny analysis of gene families that confer self-incompatibility in Brassicaceae and found that the critical serine receptor kinase receptor gene is derived from a lineage-specific tandem duplication. The T. hassleriana genome will facilitate future research toward elucidating the evolutionary history of Brassicaceae genomes.
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