Name:Mei Yang Ray Ming
Tell:
Email:yangmei815815@wbgcas.cn rayming@illinois.edu
Organization:Wuhan Botanical Garden
What Makes Us so Different: American and Asian Lotus?
2022-06-30
Nelumbo is a unique genus of Nelumbonaceae, which comprises two extant species: N. nucifera Gaertn. widely distributed in Asia and northern Australia, and N. lutea Pers. which is distributed in America. These two species exhibit differences in morphology, such as plant size, leaf shape, petal shape and petal color, but share the same chromosome number.
A research team from Wuhan Botanical Garden and Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University sequenced the genome of American lotus, and revealed possible genomic bases for petal color, carpel thermogenesis and domestication in lotus.
Researchers assembled a total length of 843 Mb genome of American lotus, which was about 30 Mb larger than that of Asian lotus var. “China Antique”. Comparative genomic analyses showed the two species exhibited high synteny and diverged about 13.86 million years ago.
Five anthocyanins were confirmed in the flower petals of the Asian lotus, which determined the flower color, while, carotenoid compounds were identified to contribute to the yellow flower color in American lotus. Furthermore, the study conformed a MYB transcription factor NnMYB5 could induce anthocyanin biosynthesis to produce red coloration in Asian lotus petals.
The lotus flower can maintain a constant temperature of 30-36°C during anthesis for 2-4 days. Increased transcript abundances of genes encoding alternative oxidase, uncoupling proteins, and sugar metabolism and transportation suggested that these genes were likely to contribute to thermogenesis, which might play an important role in flower protogyny.
Deep divergence between American and Asian lotus was revealed through population genomic analyses. Moreover, researchers revealed the independent domestication of seed, rhizome and flower traits in cultivated Asian lotus.
This research was funded by the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences of CAS, start-up fund from Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Biological Resources Program of CAS, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.
The results have been published in The Plant Journal entitled “Comparative analyses of American and Asian lotus genomes reveal insights into petal color, carpel thermogenesis and domestication”.
Characteristics of the Nelumbo lutea (American lotus) genome. (A) Distribution of genomic features along the American lotus genome. (B) Inferred phylogenetic tree across eight plant species. (C) Synteny blocks between Asian lotus (N. nucifera Gaertn.) and American lotus (N. lutea Willd) (Image by WBG)