The Tartary Buckwheat Genome Provides Insights into Rutin Biosynthesis and Abiotic Stress Tolerance

Lijun Zhang(Ministry of Natural Resources), Xiuxiu Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bin Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiang Gao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huilong Du(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuanhuai Han(Shanxi Agricultural University), Yan Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yinghao Cao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ming Qi(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yaxin Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongwei Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Mingchuan Ma(Ministry of Natural Resources), Longlong Liu(Ministry of Natural Resources), Jianping Zhou(Ministry of Natural Resources), Chenghu Nan(Ministry of Natural Resources), Yongjun Qin(Ministry of Natural Resources), Jun Wang(South China Agricultural University), Lin Cui(Ministry of Natural Resources), Huimin Liu(Ministry of Natural Resources), Chengzhi Liang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhijun Qiao(Ministry of Natural Resources)
Molecular Plant
September 1, 2017
Cited by 397Open Access
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Abstract

Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) is an important pseudocereal crop that is strongly adapted to growth in adverse environments. Its gluten-free grain contains complete proteins with a well-balanced composition of essential amino acids and is a rich source of beneficial phytochemicals that provide significant health benefits. Here, we report a high-quality, chromosome-scale Tartary buckwheat genome sequence of 489.3 Mb that is assembled by combining whole-genome shotgun sequencing of both Illumina short reads and single-molecule real-time long reads, sequence tags of a large DNA insert fosmid library, Hi-C sequencing data, and BioNano genome maps. We annotated 33 366 high-confidence protein-coding genes based on expression evidence. Comparisons of the intra-genome with the sugar beet genome revealed an independent whole-genome duplication that occurred in the buckwheat lineage after they diverged from the common ancestor, which was not shared with rosids or asterids. The reference genome facilitated the identification of many new genes predicted to be involved in rutin biosynthesis and regulation, aluminum stress resistance, and in drought and cold stress responses. Our data suggest that Tartary buckwheat's ability to tolerate high levels of abiotic stress is attributed to the expansion of several gene families involved in signal transduction, gene regulation, and membrane transport. The availability of these genomic resources will facilitate the discovery of agronomically and nutritionally important genes and genetic improvement of Tartary buckwheat.


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