Genome-wide comparative analysis of the Brassica rapa gene space reveals genome shrinkage and differential loss of duplicated genes after whole genome triplication

Jeong‐Hwan Mun(Rural Development Administration), Soo-Jin Kwon(Rural Development Administration), Tae‐Jin Yang(Seoul National University), Young‐Joo Seol(Rural Development Administration), Mina Jin(Rural Development Administration), Jin A. Kim(Rural Development Administration), Myung‐Ho Lim(Rural Development Administration), Jung Sun Kim(Rural Development Administration), Seunghoon Baek(Rural Development Administration), Beom‐Soon Choi(Seoul National University), Hee‐Ju Yu(Rural Development Administration), Dae‐Soo Kim(Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology), Namshin Kim(Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology), Ki‐Byung Lim(Kyungpook National University), Soo In Lee(Rural Development Administration), Jang-Ho Hahn(Rural Development Administration), Yong Pyo Lim(Chungnam National University), Ian Bancroft(John Innes Centre), Beom‐Seok Park(Rural Development Administration)
Genome biology
October 12, 2009
Cited by 226Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Brassica rapa is one of the most economically important vegetable crops worldwide. Owing to its agronomic importance and phylogenetic position, B. rapa provides a crucial reference to understand polyploidy-related crop genome evolution. The high degree of sequence identity and remarkably conserved genome structure between Arabidopsis and Brassica genomes enables comparative tiling sequencing using Arabidopsis sequences as references to select the counterpart regions in B. rapa, which is a strong challenge of structural and comparative crop genomics. RESULTS: We assembled 65.8 megabase-pairs of non-redundant euchromatic sequence of B. rapa and compared this sequence to the Arabidopsis genome to investigate chromosomal relationships, macrosynteny blocks, and microsynteny within blocks. The triplicated B. rapa genome contains only approximately twice the number of genes as in Arabidopsis because of genome shrinkage. Genome comparisons suggest that B. rapa has a distinct organization of ancestral genome blocks as a result of recent whole genome triplication followed by a unique diploidization process. A lack of the most recent whole genome duplication (3R) event in the B. rapa genome, atypical of other Brassica genomes, may account for the emergence of B. rapa from the Brassica progenitor around 8 million years ago. CONCLUSIONS: This work demonstrates the potential of using comparative tiling sequencing for genome analysis of crop species. Based on a comparative analysis of the B. rapa sequences and the Arabidopsis genome, it appears that polyploidy and chromosomal diploidization are ongoing processes that collectively stabilize the B. rapa genome and facilitate its evolution.


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