| Literature DB >> 28473262 |
En-Hua Xia1, Hai-Bin Zhang2, Jun Sheng3, Kui Li2, Qun-Jie Zhang4, Changhoon Kim5, Yun Zhang6, Yuan Liu2, Ting Zhu7, Wei Li2, Hui Huang2, Yan Tong6, Hong Nan8, Cong Shi8, Chao Shi2, Jian-Jun Jiang2, Shu-Yan Mao6, Jun-Ying Jiao6, Dan Zhang2, Yuan Zhao3, You-Jie Zhao6, Li-Ping Zhang6, Yun-Long Liu6, Ben-Ying Liu9, Yue Yu5, Sheng-Fu Shao10, De-Jiang Ni11, Evan E Eichler12, Li-Zhi Gao13.
Abstract
Tea is the world's oldest and most popular caffeine-containing beverage with immense economic, medicinal, and cultural importance. Here, we present the first high-quality nucleotide sequence of the repeat-rich (80.9%), 3.02-Gb genome of the cultivated tea tree Camellia sinensis. We show that an extraordinarily large genome size of tea tree is resulted from the slow, steady, and long-term amplification of a few LTR retrotransposon families. In addition to a recent whole-genome duplication event, lineage-specific expansions of genes associated with flavonoid metabolic biosynthesis were discovered, which enhance catechin production, terpene enzyme activation, and stress tolerance, important features for tea flavor and adaptation. We demonstrate an independent and rapid evolution of the tea caffeine synthesis pathway relative to cacao and coffee. A comparative study among 25 Camellia species revealed that higher expression levels of most flavonoid- and caffeine- but not theanine-related genes contribute to the increased production of catechins and caffeine and thus enhance tea-processing suitability and tea quality. These novel findings pave the way for further metabolomic and functional genomic refinement of characteristic biosynthesis pathways and will help develop a more diversified set of tea flavors that would eventually satisfy and attract more tea drinkers worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: Caffeine biosynthesis; Comparative genomics; Global adaptation; Tea flavor; Tea tree genome; Tea-proccessing suitability
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28473262 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2017.04.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164