| Literature DB >> 35701896 |
Ming He1,2, Yuqi He1, Kaixuan Zhang1, Xiang Lu1,3, Xuemei Zhang4, Bin Gao1, Yu Fan1,3, Hui Zhao1, Rintu Jha1, Md Nurul Huda1, Yu Tang1, Junzhen Wang5, Weifei Yang4, Mingli Yan6, Jianping Cheng3, Jingjun Ruan3, Ehsan Dulloo7, Zongwen Zhang7, Milen I Georgiev8,9, Mark A Chapman10, Meiliang Zhou1.
Abstract
Golden buckwheat (Fagopyrum dibotrys or Fagopyrum cymosum) and Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) belong to the Polygonaceae and the Fagopyrum genus is rich in flavonoids. Golden buckwheat is a wild relative of Tartary buckwheat, yet golden buckwheat is a traditional Chinese herbal medicine and Tartary buckwheat is a food crop. The genetic basis of adaptive divergence between these two buckwheats is poorly understood. Here, we assembled a high-quality chromosome-level genome of golden buckwheat and found a one-to-one syntenic relationship with the chromosomes of Tartary buckwheat. Two large inversions were identified that differentiate golden buckwheat and Tartary buckwheat. Metabolomic and genetic comparisons of golden buckwheat and Tartary buckwheat indicate an amplified copy number of FdCHI, FdF3H, FdDFR, and FdLAR gene families in golden buckwheat, and a parallel increase in medicinal flavonoid content. Resequencing of 34 wild golden buckwheat accessions across the two morphologically distinct ecotypes identified candidate genes, including FdMYB44 and FdCRF4, putatively involved in flavonoid accumulation and differentiation of plant architecture, respectively. Our comparative genomic study provides abundant genomic resources of genomic divergent variation to improve buckwheat with excellent nutritional and medicinal value.Entities:
Keywords: comparative genomics; differentiation; flavonoids biosynthesis; genome; golden buckwheat
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35701896 DOI: 10.1111/nph.18306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.323