| Literature DB >> 35039834 |
Xiaohui Wen1,2, Junzhuo Li1, Lili Wang3, Chenfei Lu1, Qiang Gao2, Peng Xu4,5, Ya Pu1, Qiuling Zhang1, Yan Hong1, Luo Hong1, He Huang1, Huaigen Xin3, Xiaoyun Wu1, Dongru Kang6, Kang Gao1, Yajun Li1, Chaofeng Ma1, Xuming Li3, Hongkun Zheng3, Zicheng Wang6, Yuannian Jiao4,5, Liangsheng Zhang2, Silan Dai1.
Abstract
Cultivated chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum × morifolium Ramat.) is a beloved ornamental crop due to the diverse capitula types among varieties, but the molecular mechanism of capitulum development remains unclear. Here, we report a 2.60 Gb chromosome-scale reference genome of C. lavandulifolium, a wild Chrysanthemum species found in China, Korea and Japan. The evolutionary analysis of the genome revealed that only recent tandem duplications occurred in the C. lavandulifolium genome after the shared whole genome triplication (WGT) in Asteraceae. Based on the transcriptomic profiling of six important developmental stages of the radiate capitulum in C. lavandulifolium, we found genes in the MADS-box, TCP, NAC and LOB gene families that were involved in disc and ray floret primordia differentiation. Notably, NAM and LOB30 homologs were specifically expressed in the radiate capitulum, suggesting their pivotal roles in the genetic network of disc and ray floret primordia differentiation in chrysanthemum. The present study not only provides a high-quality reference genome of chrysanthemum but also provides insight into the molecular mechanism underlying the diverse capitulum types in chrysanthemum.Entities:
Keywords: C. lavandulifolium; disc and ray florets; diverse capitula types; genome sequencing; origin of chrysanthemum
Year: 2022 PMID: 35039834 PMCID: PMC8771455 DOI: 10.1093/hr/uhab022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hortic Res ISSN: 2052-7276 Impact factor: 6.793