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Article|20 Nov 2018|OPEN
The chromosome-level quality genome provides insights into the evolution of the biosynthesis genes for aroma compounds of Osmanthus fragrans
Xiulian Yang1,2 , Yuanzheng Yue1,2 , Haiyan Li1,2 , Wenjie Ding1,2 , Gongwei Chen1,2 , Tingting Shi1,2 , Junhao Chen3 , Min S. Park4 , , Fei Chen3 , , Lianggui Wang,1,2 ,
1Co-Innovation Center for Sustainable Forestry in Southern China, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, China
2College of Landscape Architecture, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, China
3State Key Laboratory of Ecological Pest Control for Fujian and Taiwan Crops, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, China
4Nextomics Bioscience Institute, Wuhan, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: minsungpark@grandomics.com,frank@fafu.edu.cn,wlg@njfu.com.cn

Horticulture Research 5,
Article number: 72 (2018)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0108-0
Views: 1046

Received: 07 Nov 2018
Revised: 12 Nov 2018
Accepted: 13 Nov 2018
Published online: 20 Nov 2018

Abstract

Sweet osmanthus (Osmanthus fragrans) is a very popular ornamental tree species throughout Southeast Asia and USA particularly for its extremely fragrant aroma. We constructed a chromosome-level reference genome of O. fragrans to assist in studies of the evolution, genetic diversity, and molecular mechanism of aroma development. A total of over 118 Gb of polished reads was produced from HiSeq (45.1 Gb) and PacBio Sequel (73.35 Gb), giving 100× depth coverage for long reads. The combination of Illumina-short reads, PacBio-long reads, and Hi-C data produced the final chromosome quality genome of O. fragrans with a genome size of 727 Mb and a heterozygosity of 1.45 %. The genome was annotated using de novo and homology comparison and further refined with transcriptome data. The genome of O. fragrans was predicted to have 45,542 genes, of which 95.68 % were functionally annotated. Genome annotation found 49.35 % as the repetitive sequences, with long terminal repeats (LTR) being the richest (28.94 %). Genome evolution analysis indicated the evidence of whole-genome duplication 15 million years ago, which contributed to the current content of 45,242 genes. Metabolic analysis revealed that linalool, a monoterpene is the main aroma compound. Based on the genome and transcriptome, we further demonstrated the direct connection between terpene synthases (TPSs) and the rich aromatic molecules in O. fragrans. We identified three new flower-specific TPS genes, of which the expression coincided with the production of linalool. Our results suggest that the high number of TPS genes and the flower tissue- and stage-specific TPS genes expressions might drive the strong unique aroma production of O. fragrans.