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Genome and evolution of the shade‐requiring medicinal herb Panax ginseng
Author(s) -
Kim NamHoon,
Jayakodi Murukarthick,
Lee SangChoon,
Choi BeomSoon,
Jang Woojong,
Lee Junki,
Kim Hyun Hee,
Waminal Nomar E.,
Lakshmanan Meiyappan,
Nguyen Binh,
Lee Yun Sun,
Park HyunSeung,
Koo Hyun Jo,
Park Jee Young,
Perumal Sampath,
Joh Ho Jun,
Lee Hana,
Kim Jinkyung,
Kim In Seo,
Kim Kyunghee,
Koduru Lokanand,
Kang Kyo Bin,
Sung Sang Hyun,
Yu Yeisoo,
Park Daniel S.,
Choi Doil,
Seo Eunyoung,
Kim Seungill,
Kim YoungChang,
Hyun Dong Yun,
Park YounIl,
Kim Changsoo,
Lee TaeHo,
Kim Hyun Uk,
Soh Moon Soo,
Lee Yi,
In Jun Gyo,
Kim HeuiSoo,
Kim YongMin,
Yang DeokChun,
Wing Rod A.,
Lee DongYup,
Paterson Andrew H.,
Yang TaeJin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
plant biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.525
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1467-7652
pISSN - 1467-7644
DOI - 10.1111/pbi.12926
Subject(s) - biology , ginseng , araliaceae , genome , ginsenoside , botany , sequence assembly , centella , ploidy , gene , traditional medicine , genetics , transcriptome , medicine , gene expression , alternative medicine , pathology
Summary Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer, reputed as the king of medicinal herbs, has slow growth, long generation time, low seed production and complicated genome structure that hamper its study. Here, we unveil the genomic architecture of tetraploid P. ginseng by de novo genome assembly, representing 2.98 Gbp with 59 352 annotated genes. Resequencing data indicated that diploid Panax species diverged in association with global warming in Southern Asia, and two North American species evolved via two intercontinental migrations. Two whole genome duplications ( WGD ) occurred in the family Araliaceae (including Panax ) after divergence with the Apiaceae, the more recent one contributing to the ability of P. ginseng to overwinter, enabling it to spread broadly through the Northern Hemisphere. Functional and evolutionary analyses suggest that production of pharmacologically important dammarane‐type ginsenosides originated in Panax and are produced largely in shoot tissues and transported to roots; that newly evolved P. ginseng fatty acid desaturases increase freezing tolerance; and that unprecedented retention of chlorophyll a/b binding protein genes enables efficient photosynthesis under low light. A genome‐scale metabolic network provides a holistic view of Panax ginsenoside biosynthesis. This study provides valuable resources for improving medicinal values of ginseng either through genomics‐assisted breeding or metabolic engineering.

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