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- Title
- New reference genome sequences of hot pepper reveal the massive evolution of plant disease-resistance genes by retroduplication
- Author(s)
- S Kim; J Park; S I Yeom; Yong Min Kim; E Seo; K T Kim; M S Kim; J M Lee; K Cheong; H S Shin; S B Kim; K Han; J Lee; M Park; H A Lee; H Y Lee; Y Lee; S Oh; J H Lee; E Choi; Namjin Koo; Yunji Hong; Ryan W Kim; J L Bennetzen; D Choi
- Bibliographic Citation
- Genome Biology, vol. 18, pp. 210-210
- Publication Year
- 2017
- Abstract
- Background: Transposable elements are major evolutionary forces which can cause new genome structure and species diversification. The role of transposable elements in the expansion of nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich-repeat proteins (NLRs), the major disease-resistance gene families, has been unexplored in plants. Results: We report two high-quality de novo genomes (Capsicum baccatum and C. chinense) and an improved reference genome (C. annuum) for peppers. Dynamic genome rearrangements involving translocations among chromosomes 3, 5, and 9 were detected in comparison between C. baccatum and the two other peppers. The amplification of athila LTR-retrotransposons, members of the gypsy superfamily, led to genome expansion in C. baccatum. In-depth genome-wide comparison of genes and repeats unveiled that the copy numbers of NLRs were greatly increased by LTR-retrotransposon-mediated retroduplication. Moreover, retroduplicated NLRs are abundant across the angiosperms and, in most cases, are lineage-specific. Conclusions: Our study reveals that retroduplication has played key roles for the massive emergence of NLR genes including functional disease-resistance genes in pepper plants
- Keyword
- Disease-resistance geneGenome evolutionLTR-retrotransposonNLRRetroduplication
- ISSN
- 1474-760X
- Publisher
- Springer-BMC
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-017-1341-9
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- Division of Research on National Challenges > Plant Systems Engineering Research > 1. Journal Articles
- Files in This Item:
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