| Literature DB >> 34354050 |
Shi-Ping Cheng1, Kai-Hua Jia2, Hui Liu2, Ren-Gang Zhang3, Zhi-Chao Li2, Shan-Shan Zhou2, Tian-Le Shi2, Ai-Chu Ma4, Cong-Wen Yu4, Chan Gao4, Guang-Lei Cao4, Wei Zhao2,5, Shuai Nie2, Jing-Fang Guo2, Si-Qian Jiao2, Xue-Chan Tian2, Xue-Mei Yan2, Yu-Tao Bao2, Quan-Zheng Yun3, Xin-Zhu Wang3, Ilga Porth6, Yousry A El-Kassaby7, Xiao-Ru Wang2,5, Zhen Li8,9, Yves Van de Peer10,11,12,13, Jian-Feng Mao14.
Abstract
Ginger (Zingiber officinale) is one of the most valued spice plants worldwide; it is prized for its culinary and folk medicinal applications and is therefore of high economic and cultural importance. Here, we present a haplotype-resolved, chromosome-scale assembly for diploid ginger anchored to 11 pseudochromosome pairs with a total length of 3.1 Gb. Remarkable structural variation was identified between haplotypes, and two inversions larger than 15 Mb on chromosome 4 may be associated with ginger infertility. We performed a comprehensive, spatiotemporal, genome-wide analysis of allelic expression patterns, revealing that most alleles are coordinately expressed. The alleles that exhibited the largest differences in expression showed closer proximity to transposable elements, greater coding sequence divergence, more relaxed selection pressure, and more transcription factor binding site differences. We also predicted the transcription factors potentially regulating 6-gingerol biosynthesis. Our allele-aware assembly provides a powerful platform for future functional genomics, molecular breeding, and genome editing in ginger.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34354050 DOI: 10.1038/s41438-021-00599-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hortic Res ISSN: 2052-7276 Impact factor: 6.793