| Literature DB >> 28917590 |
Honghe Sun1, Shan Wu2, Guoyu Zhang3, Chen Jiao4, Shaogui Guo3, Yi Ren3, Jie Zhang3, Haiying Zhang3, Guoyi Gong3, Zhangcai Jia3, Fan Zhang3, Jiaxing Tian3, William J Lucas5, Jeff J Doyle6, Haizhen Li3, Zhangjun Fei7, Yong Xu8.
Abstract
The Cucurbita genus contains several economically important species in the Cucurbitaceae family. Here, we report high-quality genome sequences of C. maxima and C. moschata and provide evidence supporting an allotetraploidization event in Cucurbita. We are able to partition the genome into two homoeologous subgenomes based on different genetic distances to melon, cucumber, and watermelon in the Benincaseae tribe. We estimate that the two diploid progenitors successively diverged from Benincaseae around 31 and 26 million years ago (Mya), respectively, and the allotetraploidization happened at some point between 26 Mya and 3 Mya, the estimated date when C. maxima and C. moschata diverged. The subgenomes have largely maintained the chromosome structures of their diploid progenitors. Such long-term karyotype stability after polyploidization has not been commonly observed in plant polyploids. The two subgenomes have retained similar numbers of genes, and neither subgenome is globally dominant in gene expression. Allele-specific expression analysis in the C. maxima × C. moschata interspecific F1 hybrid and their two parents indicates the predominance of trans-regulatory effects underlying expression divergence of the parents, and detects transgressive gene expression changes in the hybrid correlated with heterosis in important agronomic traits. Our study provides insights into polyploid genome evolution and valuable resources for genetic improvement of cucurbit crops.Entities:
Keywords: Cucurbita maxima; Cucurbita moschata; allele-specific expression; karyotype stability; paleo-allotetraploid; unbiased fractionation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28917590 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2017.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164