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Article|01 May 2020|OPEN
The chromosome-scale genome reveals the evolution and diversification after the recent tetraploidization event in tea plant
Jie-Dan Chen1 , Chao Zheng1 , Jian-Qiang Ma1 , Chen-Kai Jiang1 , Sezai Ercisli2 , Ming-Zhe Yao1 , and Liang Chen,1 ,
1Key Laboratory of Tea Biology and Resources Utilization, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Tea Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science, Hangzhou 310008, China
2Department of Horticulture, Faculty of Agriculture, Ataturk University, Erzurum, Turkey
*Corresponding author. E-mail: yaomz@tricaas.com,liangchen@tricaas.com

Horticulture Research 7,
Article number: 63 (2020)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-020-0288-2
Views: 1018

Received: 18 Dec 2019
Revised: 02 Mar 2020
Accepted: 08 Mar 2020
Published online: 01 May 2020

Abstract

Tea is one of the most popular nonalcoholic beverages due to its characteristic secondary metabolites with numerous health benefits. Although two draft genomes of tea plant (Camellia sinensis) have been published recently, the lack of chromosome-scale assembly hampers the understanding of the fundamental genomic architecture of tea plant and potential improvement. Here, we performed a genome-wide chromosome conformation capture technique (Hi-C) to obtain a chromosome-scale assembly based on the draft genome of C. sinensis var. sinensis and successfully ordered 2984.7 Mb (94.7%) scaffolds into 15 chromosomes. The scaffold N50 of the improved genome was 218.1 Mb, ~157-fold higher than that of the draft genome. Collinearity comparison of genome sequences and two genetic maps validated the high contiguity and accuracy of the chromosome-scale assembly. We clarified that only one Camellia recent tetraploidization event (CRT, 58.9–61.7 million years ago (Mya)) occurred after the core-eudicot common hexaploidization event (146.6–152.7 Mya). Meanwhile, 9243 genes (28.6%) occurred in tandem duplication, and most of these expanded after the CRT event. These gene duplicates increased functionally divergent genes that play important roles in tea-specific biosynthesis or stress response. Sixty-four catechin- and caffeine-related quantitative trait loci (QTLs) were anchored to chromosome assembly. Of these, two catechin-related QTL hotspots were derived from the CRT event, which illustrated that polyploidy has played a dramatic role in the diversification of tea germplasms. The availability of a chromosome-scale genome of tea plant holds great promise for the understanding of genome evolution and the discovery of novel genes contributing to agronomically beneficial traits in future breeding programs.