Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2021
Genomic basis of high-altitude adaptation in Tibetan Prunus fruit trees
Wang, Xia; Liu, Shengjun; Zuo, Hao; Zheng, Weikang; Zhang, Shanshan; Huang, Yue; Pingcuo, Gesang; Ying, Hong; Zhao, Fan; Li, Yuanrong; Liu, Junwei; Yi, Ting-Shuang; Zan, Yanjun; Larkin, Robert M.; Deng, Xiuxin; Zeng, Xiuli; Xu, QiangAbstract
The Great Himalayan Mountains and their foothills are believed to be the place of origin and development of many plant species. The genetic basis of adaptation to high plateaus is a fascinating topic that is poorly understood at the population level. We comprehensively collected and sequenced 377 accessions of Prunus germplasm along altitude gradients ranging from 2,067 to 4,492 m in the Himalayas. We de novo assembled three high-quality genomes of Tibetan Prunus species. A comparative analysis of Prunus genomes indicated a remarkable expansion of the SINE retrotransposons occurred in the genomes of Tibetan species. We observed genetic differentiation between Tibetan peaches from high and low altitudes and that genes associated with light stress signaling, especially UV stress signaling, were enriched in the differentiated regions. By profiling the metabolomes of Tibetan peach fruit, we determined 379 metabolites had significant genetic correlations with altitudes and that in particular phenylpropanoids were positively correlated with altitudes. We identified 62 Tibetan peach-specific SINEs that colocalized with metabolites differentially accumualted in Tibetan relative to cultivated peach. We demonstrated that two SINEs were inserted in a locus controlling the accumulation of 3-O-feruloyl quinic acid. SINE1 was specific to Tibetan peach. SINE2 was predominant in high altitudes and associated with the accumulation of 3-O-feruloyl quinic acid. These genomic and metabolic data for Prunus populations native to the Himalayan region indicate that the expansion of SINE retrotransposons helped Tibetan Prunus species adapt to the harsh environment of the Himalayan plateau by promoting the accumulation of beneficial metabolites.Published in
Current Biology2021, volume: 31, number: 17, pages: 3848-3860
Publisher: CELL PRESS
Authors' information
Wang, Xia
Huazhong Agricultural University
Liu, Shengjun
Huazhong Agricultural University
Zuo, Hao
Huazhong Agricultural University
Zheng, Weikang
Huazhong Agricultural University
Zhang, Shanshan
Minist Agr and Rural Affairs
Zhang, Shanshan
Tibet Acad Agr and Anim Husb Sci
Huang, Yue
Huazhong Agricultural University
Pingcuo, Gesang
Tibet Acad Agr and Anim Husb Sci
Pingcuo, Gesang
Minist Agr and Rural Affairs
Ying, Hong
Tibet Acad Agr and Anim Husb Sci
Ying, Hong
Minist Agr and Rural Affairs
Zhao, Fan
Minist Agr and Rural Affairs
Zhao, Fan
Tibet Acad Agr and Anim Husb Sci
Li, Yuanrong
Tibet Acad Agr and Anim Husb Sci
Li, Yuanrong
Minist Agr and Rural Affairs
Liu, Junwei
Huazhong Agricultural University
Yi, Ting-Shuang
Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology
Larkin, Robert M.
Huazhong Agricultural University
Deng, Xiuxin
Huazhong Agricultural University
UKÄ Subject classification
Evolutionary Biology
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.062
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/114609