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Article|18 Nov 2021|OPEN
The Physalis floridana genome provides insights into the biochemical and morphological evolution of Physalis fruits
Jiangjie Lu1,2 , Meifang Luo1,3 , Li Wang1 , Kunpeng Li1,3 , Yongyi Yu4 , Weifei Yang4 , Pichang Gong1 , Huihui Gao1,3 , Qiaoru Li1,3 , Jing Zhao1,3 , Lanfeng Wu1,3 , Mingshu Zhang1,3 and Xueyang Liu1,3 , Xuemei Zhang4 , Xian Zhang2 , Jieyu Kang2 , Tongyuan Yu2 , Zhimin Li4 , Chaoying He1,3,5 , , Huizhong Wang2 , , Yuannian Jiao,1,3 ,
1State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanxincun 20, 100093 Xiangshan, Beijing, China
2Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory for Genetic Improvement and Quality Control of Medicinal Plants, College of Life and Environmental Science, Hangzhou Normal University, 310036 Hangzhou, China
3University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yuquan Road 19, 100049 Beijing, China
4Annoroad Gene Technology (Beijing) Co, Ltd, 100176 Beijing, China
5The Innovative Academy of Seed Design, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: chaoying@ibcas.ac.cn,whz62@163.com,jiaoyn@ibcas.ac.cn

Horticulture Research 8,
Article number: 244 (2021)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-021-00705-w
Views: 599

Received: 31 May 2021
Revised: 13 Sep 2021
Accepted: 15 Sep 2021
Published online: 18 Nov 2021

Abstract

The fruits of Physalis (Solanaceae) have a unique structure, a lantern-like fruiting calyx known as inflated calyx syndrome (ICS) or the Chinese lantern, and are rich in steroid-related compounds. However, the genetic variations underlying the origin of these characteristic traits and diversity in Physalis remain largely unknown. Here, we present a high-quality chromosome-level reference genome assembly of Physalis floridana (~1.40 Gb in size) with a contig N50 of ~4.87 Mb. Through evolutionary genomics and experimental approaches, we found that the loss of the SEP-like MADS-box gene MBP21 subclade is likely a key mutation that, together with the previously revealed mutation affecting floral MPF2 expression, might have contributed to the origination of ICS in Physaleae, suggesting that the origination of a morphological novelty may have resulted from an evolutionary scenario in which one mutation compensated for another deleterious mutation. Moreover, the significant expansion of squalene epoxidase genes is potentially associated with the natural variation of steroid-related compounds in Physalis fruits. The results reveal the importance of gene gains (duplication) and/or subsequent losses as genetic bases of the evolution of distinct fruit traits, and the data serve as a valuable resource for the evolutionary genetics and breeding of solanaceous crops.