Genome and transcriptome analysis of the Mesoamerican common bean and the role of gene duplications in establishing tissue and temporal specialization of genes
View/Open
Author
Vlasova, Anna
Capella-Gutiérrez, Salvador
Rendón-Anaya, Martha
Hernández-Oñate, Miguel
Minoche, André E.
Erb, Ionas
Câmara, Francisco
Prieto-Barja, Pablo
Corvelo, André
Sanseverino, Walter
Westergaard, Gastón
Dohm, Juliane C.
Pappas Jr, Georgios J.
Saburido-Alvarez, Soledad
Kedra, Darek
Gonzalez, Irene
Cozzuto, Luca
Gómez-Garrido, Jessica
Aguilar-Morón, María A.
Andreu, Nuria
Aguilar, O. Mario
Zehnsdorf, Maik
Vázquez, Martín P.
Delgado-Salinas, Alfonso
Delaye, Luis
Lowy, Ernesto
Mentaberry, Alejandro
Vianello-Brondani, Rosana P.
García, José Luís
Alioto, Tyler
Sánchez, Federico
Himmelbauer, Heinz
Santalla, Marta
Notredame, Cedric
Gabaldón, Toni
Herrera-Estrella, Alfredo
Guigó, Roderic
Publication date
2016-02-25ISSN
1474-760X
Abstract
Background: Legumes are the third largest family of angiosperms and the second most important crop class. Legume genomes have been shaped by extensive large-scale gene duplications, including an approximately 58 million year old whole genome duplication shared by most crop legumes.
Results: We report the genome and the transcription atlas of coding and non-coding genes of a Mesoamerican genotype of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L., BAT93). Using a comprehensive phylogenomics analysis, we assessed the past and recent evolution of common bean, and traced the diversification of patterns of gene expression following duplication. We find that successive rounds of gene duplications in legumes have shaped tissue and developmental expression, leading to increased levels of specialization in larger gene families. We also find that many long non-coding RNAs are preferentially expressed in germ-line-related tissues (pods and seeds), suggesting that they play a significant role in fruit development. Our results also suggest that most bean-specific gene family expansions, including resistance gene clusters, predate the split of the Mesoamerican and Andean gene pools.
Conclusions: The genome and transcriptome data herein generated for a Mesoamerican genotype represent a counterpart to the genomic resources already available for the Andean gene pool. Altogether, this information will allow the genetic dissection of the characters involved in the domestication and adaptation of the crop, and their further implementation in breeding strategies for this important crop.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
633 - Cultius i produccions
Pages
18
Publisher
BMC
Is part of
Genome Biology
Citation
Vlasova, Anna, Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez, Martha Rendón-Anaya, Miguel Hernández-Oñate, André E. Minoche, Ionas Erb, and Francisco Câmara et al. 2016. "Genome And Transcriptome Analysis Of The Mesoamerican Common Bean And The Role Of Gene Duplications In Establishing Tissue And Temporal Specialization Of Genes". Genome Biology 17 (1). doi:10.1186/s13059-016-0883-6.
Grant agreement number
MICINN/Programa Nacional de Internacionalización de la I+D/EUI2009-04052/ES/SECUENCIACION DEL GENOMA Y DEL TRANSCRIPTOMA DE PHASEOLUS VULGARIS/
MICINN/Programa Nacional de Proyectos de Investigación Fundamental/BIO2011-26205/ES/INVESTIGACION DEL SPLICING MEDIANTE SECUENCIACION MASIVAMENTE PARALELA DEL TRANSCRIPTOMA Y DEL ESTATUS DE LA CROMATINA/
MINECO/Programa Nacional de Fortalecimiento Institucional/SEV-2012-0208/ES/ /
ISCIII-FEDER/ /PT13-0001-0021/ES/ /
Program
Genòmica i Biotecnologia
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [2160]
The following license files are associated with this item:
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/