De novo genome assembly of the medicinal plant Gentiana macrophylla provides insights into the genomic evolution and biosynthesis of iridoids

  • Tao Zhou
  • , Guoqing Bai
  • , Yiheng Hu
  • , Markus Ruhsam
  • , Yanci Yang
  • , Yuemei Zhao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gentiana macrophylla is a perennial herb in the Gentianaceae family, whose dried roots are used in traditional Chinese medicine. Here, we assembled a chromosome-level genome of G. macrophylla using a combination of Nanopore, Illumina, and Hi-C scaffolding approaches. The final genome size was ~1.79 Gb (contig N50 = 720.804 kb), and 98.89% of the genome sequences were anchored on 13 pseudochromosomes (scaffold N50 = 122.73 Mb). The genome contained 55,337 protein-coding genes, and 73.47% of the assemblies were repetitive sequences. Genome evolution analysis indicated that G. macrophylla underwent two rounds of whole-genome duplication after the core eudicot γgenome triplication event. We further identified candidate genes related to the biosynthesis of iridoids, and the corresponding gene families mostly expanded in G. macrophylla. In addition, we found that root-specific genes are enriched in pathways involved in defense responses, which may greatly improve the biological adaptability of G. macrophylla. Phylogenomic analyses showed a sister relationship of asterids and rosids, and all Gentianales species formed a monophyletic group. Our study contributes to the understanding of genome evolution and active component biosynthesis in G. macrophylla and provides important genomic resource for the genetic improvement and breeding of G. macrophylla.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberdsac034
JournalDNA Research
Volume29
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Gentiana macrophylla
  • genome assembly
  • iridoid biosynthesis
  • medicinal plant
  • whole-genome duplication

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