Diploid and tetraploid genomes of Acorus and the evolution of monocots
Ma, Liang; Liu, Ke-Wei; Li, Zhen; Hsiao, Yu-Yun; Qi, Yiying; Fu, Tao; Tang, Guang-Da; Zhang, Diyang; Sun, Wei-Hong; Liu, Ding-Kun; Hao, Yang; Huang, Jie; Zhao, Xue-Wei; Ke, Shijie; Chen, You-Yi; Wu, Wan-Lin; Hsu, Jui-Ling; Lin, Yu-Fu; Huang, Ming-Der; Li, Chia-Ying; Huang, Laiqiang; Wang, Zhi-Wen; Zhao, Xiang; Zhong, Wen-Ying; Peng, Dong-Hui; Ahmad, Sagheer; Lan, Siren; Zhang, Ji-Sen; Tsai, Wen-Chieh; Van de Peer, Yves; Liu, Zhong-Jian
Date:
2023-06-20
Abstract:
Monocots are a major taxon within flowering plants, have unique morphological
traits, and show an extraordinary diversity in lifestyle. To improve our
understanding of monocot origin and evolution, we generate chromosomelevel
reference genomes of the diploid Acorus gramineus and the tetraploid Ac.
calamus, the only two accepted species from the family Acoraceae,which form
a sister lineage to all other monocots. Comparing the genomes of Ac. gramineus
and Ac. calamus, we suggest that Ac. gramineus is not a potential diploid
progenitor of Ac. calamus, and Ac. calamus is an allotetraploid with two subgenomes
A, and B, presenting asymmetric evolution and B subgenome dominance.
Both the diploid genome of Ac. gramineus and the subgenomes A and B
of Ac. calamus show clear evidence of whole-genome duplication (WGD), but
Acoraceae does not seemto share an olderWGD that is shared bymost other
monocots. We reconstruct an ancestral monocot karyotype and gene toolkit,
and discuss scenarios that explain the complex history of the Acorus genome.
Our analyses show that the ancestors of monocots exhibit mosaic genomic
features, likely important for that appeared in early monocot evolution, providing
fundamental insights into the origin, evolution, and diversification of
monocots.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : The raw genome and transcriptome sequencing data for Ac. calamus
and Ac. gramineus have been deposited to NCBI under BioProject
accession PRJNA782402. The sequencing assembly and annotation
data of Ac. calamus and Ac. gramineus reported in this paper have been
deposited in the Genome Warehouse in National Genomics Data
Center, Beijing Institute of Genomics, Chinese Academy of Sciences/
China National Center for Bioinformation under accession
PRJCA017027; specifically, Ac. calamu is under accession number
GWHCBII00000000 and Ac. gramineus is under accession number
GWHCBIH00000000. Source data are provided with this paper.