| Literature DB >> 35655434 |
Baosheng Liao1, Xiaofeng Shen2, Li Xiang3, Shuai Guo4, Shiyu Chen4, Ying Meng5, Yu Liang5, Dandan Ding5, Junqi Bai6, Dong Zhang7, Tomasz Czechowski8, Yi Li8, Hui Yao9, Tingyu Ma5, Caroline Howard10, Chao Sun9, Haitao Liu9, Jiushi Liu9, Jin Pei11, Jihai Gao11, Jigang Wang3, Xiaohui Qiu6, Zhihai Huang6, Hongyi Li6, Ling Yuan12, Jianhe Wei9, Ian Graham8, Jiang Xu13, Boli Zhang14, Shilin Chen15.
Abstract
Artemisia annua is the major natural source of artemisinin, an anti-malarial medicine commonly used worldwide. Here, we present chromosome-level haploid maps for two A. annua strains with different artemisinin contents to explore the relationships between genomic organization and artemisinin production. High-fidelity sequencing, optical mapping, and chromatin conformation capture sequencing were used to assemble the heterogeneous and repetitive genome and resolve the haplotypes of A. annua. Approximately 50,000 genes were annotated for each haplotype genome, and a triplication event that occurred approximately 58.12 million years ago was examined for the first time in this species. A total of 3,903,467-5,193,414 variants (SNPs, indels, and structural variants) were identified in the 1.5-Gb genome during pairwise comparison between haplotypes, consistent with the high heterozygosity of this species. Genomic analyses revealed a correlation between artemisinin concents and the copy number of amorpha-4,11-diene synthase genes. This correlation was further confirmed by resequencing of 36 A. annua samples with varied artemisinin contents. Circular consensus sequencing of transcripts facilitated the detection of paralog expression. Collectively, our study provides chromosome-level allele-aware genome assemblies for two A. annua strains and new insights into the biosynthesis of artemisinin and its regulation, which will contribute to conquering malaria worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: Artemisia annua; amorpha-4,11-diene synthase; artemisinin; copy number variation; haplotype chromosome
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35655434 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2022.05.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 21.949