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Article|06 Apr 2019|OPEN
The complexity of the Fragaria x ananassa (octoploid) transcriptome by single-molecule long-read sequencing
Huazhao Yuan1 , Hongmei Yu1 , Tao Huang2 , Xinjie Shen3 , Jin Xia1 , Fuhua Pang1 , Jing Wang1 and Mizhen Zhao,1 ,
1Institute of Pomology, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Horticultural Crop Genetic Improvement, 210014 Nanjing, China
2Biomarker Technologies Corporation, 101300 Beijing, China
3Key Laboratory of Biology and Genetic Improvement of Oil Crops, Ministry of Agriculture of People’s Republic of China, Oil Crops Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, 430062 Wuhan, People’s Republic of China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: njzhaomz@163.com

Horticulture Research 6,
Article number: 46 (2019)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-019-0126-6
Views: 1174

Received: 14 Oct 2018
Revised: 21 Jan 2019
Accepted: 28 Jan 2019
Published online: 06 Apr 2019

Abstract

Strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) is an allopolyploid species with diverse and complex transcripts. The regulatory mechanisms of fruit development and maturation have been extensively studied; however, little is known about the signaling mechanisms that direct this process in octoploid strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa). Here, we used long-read sequencing (LRS) technology and RNA-seq analysis to investigate the diversity and complexity of the polyploid transcriptome and differentially expressed transcripts along four successive fruit developmental stages of cultivated strawberry. We obtained a reference transcriptome with 119,897 unique full-length isoforms, including 2017 new isoforms and 2510 long noncoding RNAs. Based on the genome of the plausible progenitor (Fragaria vesca), 20,229 alternative splicing (AS) events were identified. Using this transcriptome, we found 17,485 differentially expressed transcripts during strawberry fruit development, including 527 transcription factors (TFs) belonging to 41 families. The expression profiles of all members of the auxin, ABA pathway, and anthocyanin biosynthesis gene families were also examined, and many of them were highly expressed at the ripe fruit stage, strongly indicating that the role of those genes is in the regulation of fruit ripening. We produce a high-quality reference transcriptome for octoploid strawberry, including much of the full-length transcript diversity, to help understand the regulatory mechanisms of fruit development and maturation of polyploid species, particularly via elucidation of the biochemical pathways involved in auxin, ABA, and anthocyanin biosynthesis.