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Article|29 Oct 2025|OPEN
The near-complete genome assembly of allotetraploid Pennisetum purpureum ‘Purple’ reveals the genetic and epigenetic landscape of centromeres 
Yongji Huang1 , ,† , Jinbin Lin1,2 ,† , Jun Xu3,4 ,† , Xinyi Lin1,5 and Zuhu Deng5 , Xiaoxian Zhong6 , Sheng Zuo7 , Zhiliang Zhang,3,4 ,
1Fujian Key Laboratory on Conservation and Sustainable Utilization of Marine Biodiversity, College of Geography and Oceanography, Minjiang University, Fuzhou, China
2Center for Plant Biology, School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
3State Key Laboratory of Crop Gene Resources and Breeding, Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), Beijing, China
4National Nanfan Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), Sanya, Hainan, China
5National Engineering Research Center for Sugarcane, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, Fujian, China
6Institute of Animal Science, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Nanjing, China
7Anhui Provincial Key Laboratory of Molecular Enzymology and Mechanism of Major Metabolic Diseases, College of Life Sciences, Anhui Normal University, Wuhu, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: yongjihuang@mju.edu.cn,zhangzhiliang@caas.cn
Yongji Huang,Jinbin Lin,Jun Xu contributed equally to the study.

Horticulture Research 13,
Article number: uhaf301 (2026)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhaf301
Views: 86

Received: 14 Jun 2025
Revised: 07 Nov 2025
Published online: 29 Oct 2025

Abstract

Drastic karyotype changes are a major evolutionary force, potentially involving centromere position, number, distribution, or strength alterations. Yet, the genetic and epigenetic landscape of centromeres, especially in allopolyploid plants during subgenome reshuffling, remains poorly understood. Here, we present a near-complete chromosome-scale genome assembly of the allotetraploid Pennisetum purpureum ‘Purple’, resolving all 14 centromeres. We find that subgenome-biased expansion of six LTR retrotransposons drives architectural divergence between subgenomes. Centromeric satellite repeats (CentPs) show rapid sequence divergence across subgenomes and chromosomes, with CENH3 preferentially binding conserved higher order repeats. Intriguingly, centromeric retrotransposons in Pennisetum (CRPs) are evolutionarily younger compared to their noncentromeric counterparts, coupled with marked subgenome B-biased amplification. Notably, CRP insertions flanking CentP satellites correlate with elevated satellite DNA polymorphism, supporting a model wherein CentP homogenization processes actively purge retrotransposons from centromeric arrays. Despite rapid sequence diversification of centromeric repeats, the epigenetic landscapes remain evolutionarily conserved in the centromeres of two subgenomes. Additionally, comparative analyses across Pennisetum species demonstrate rapid species- and chromosome-level turnover of CentPs and CRPs. Overall, our study illuminates the genetic and epigenetic plasticity of centromeres in allopolyploids, revealing how centromeric repeats adapt post-subgenome reshuffling.