The resurrection genome of Boea hygrometrica: A blueprint for survival of dehydration

Author:

Xiao Lihong,Yang Ge,Zhang Liechi,Yang Xinhua,Zhao Shuang,Ji Zhongzhong,Zhou Qing,Hu Min,Wang Yu,Chen Ming,Xu Yu,Jin Haijing,Xiao Xuan,Hu Guipeng,Bao Fang,Hu Yong,Wan Ping,Li Legong,Deng Xin,Kuang Tingyun,Xiang Chengbin,Zhu Jian-Kang,Oliver Melvin J.,He Yikun

Abstract

“Drying without dying” is an essential trait in land plant evolution. Unraveling how a unique group of angiosperms, the Resurrection Plants, survive desiccation of their leaves and roots has been hampered by the lack of a foundational genome perspective. Here we report the ∼1,691-Mb sequenced genome of Boea hygrometrica, an important resurrection plant model. The sequence revealed evidence for two historical genome-wide duplication events, a compliment of 49,374 protein-coding genes, 29.15% of which are unique (orphan) to Boea and 20% of which (9,888) significantly respond to desiccation at the transcript level. Expansion of early light-inducible protein (ELIP) and 5S rRNA genes highlights the importance of the protection of the photosynthetic apparatus during drying and the rapid resumption of protein synthesis in the resurrection capability of Boea. Transcriptome analysis reveals extensive alternative splicing of transcripts and a focus on cellular protection strategies. The lack of desiccation tolerance-specific genome organizational features suggests the resurrection phenotype evolved mainly by an alteration in the control of dehydration response genes.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference35 articles.

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