학술논문

Genome assembly of autotetraploid Actinidia argutahighlights adaptive evolution and dissects important economic traits
Document Type
Article
Source
Plant Communications; 20240101, Issue: Preprints
Subject
Language
ISSN
25903462
Abstract
Actinidia arguta, the most widely distributed and the second cultivated species within Actinidiagenus, has distinguished difference from current kiwifruit in biological characters like small and smooth fruit, rapid-softening and excellent cold tolerance. Knowledge of adaptive evolution of the tetraploid Actinidiaspecies and genetic basis of its important agronomic traits is still unclear. A chromosome-scale genome assembly of an autotetraploid male A. argutahas been generated. The genome assembly was 2.77 Gb in length with a contig N50 of 9.97Mb and anchored into 116 pseudo-chromosomes. Resequencing and clustering of 101 geographically representative accessions showed they could be divided into two geographical groups, Southern and Northern Groups, which first diverged 12.9 Mya ago. A. argutaunderwent two prominent expansions and one demographic bottleneck from the mid-Pleistocene climate transition (MPT) to late-Pleistocene. Population genomics study using paleoclimate data allow us to discern the evolution of the species adaptation to different historical environments. Three genes (AaCEL1, AaPME1and AaDOF1) have been identified by multi-omics and verified their accelerating softening of flesh through transient assay. A set of genes localized in sex chromosome (Chr3), or autosomal chromosomes are biasedly expressed during stamen or carpel development, which characteristically regulate sexual dimorphism. This assembly of the autotetraploid genome at the chromosome level and detail uncover the genes related with important agronomic traits paves the way to facilitate functional genomics and improvement of A. arguta.