Liriodendron genome sheds light on angiosperm phylogeny and species–pair differentiation

Jinhui Chen(Nanjing Forestry University), Zhaodong Hao(Nanjing Forestry University), Xuanmin Guang(BGI Group (China)), Chenxi Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Pengkai Wang(Nanjing Forestry University), Liang‐Jiao Xue(University of Georgia), Qihui Zhu(BGI Group (China)), Linfeng Yang(BGI Group (China)), Yu Sheng(Nanjing Forestry University), Yanwei Zhou(Nanjing Forestry University), Haibin Xu(Nanjing Forestry University), Hongqing Xie(BGI Group (China)), Xiaofei Long(Nanjing Forestry University), Jin Zhang(University of California, Davis), Wang Zhangrong(Nanjing Forestry University), Mingming Shi(BGI Group (China)), Ye Lu(Nanjing Forestry University), Siqin Liu(Nanjing Forestry University), Guan Lanhua(Hubei Academy of Forestry), Qianhua Zhu(BGI Group (China)), Liming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Song Ge(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tielong Cheng(Nanjing Forestry University), Thomas Laux(University of Freiburg), Qiang Gao(BGI Group (China)), Ye Peng(Nanjing Forestry University), Na Liu(BGI Group (China)), Sihai Yang(China Pharmaceutical University), Jisen Shi(Nanjing Forestry University)
Nature Plants
December 14, 2018
Cited by 306Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The genus Liriodendron belongs to the family Magnoliaceae, which resides within the magnoliids, an early diverging lineage of the Mesangiospermae. However, the phylogenetic relationship of magnoliids with eudicots and monocots has not been conclusively resolved and thus remains to be determined 1–6 . Liriodendron is a relict lineage from the Tertiary with two distinct species—one East Asian ( L. chinense (Hemsley) Sargent) and one eastern North American ( L. tulipifera Linn)—identified as a vicariad species pair. However, the genetic divergence and evolutionary trajectories of these species remain to be elucidated at the whole-genome level 7 . Here, we report the first de novo genome assembly of a plant in the Magnoliaceae, L. chinense . Phylogenetic analyses suggest that magnoliids are sister to the clade consisting of eudicots and monocots, with rapid diversification occurring in the common ancestor of these three lineages. Analyses of population genetic structure indicate that L. chinense has diverged into two lineages—the eastern and western groups—in China. While L. tulipifera in North America is genetically positioned between the two L. chinense groups, it is closer to the eastern group. This result is consistent with phenotypic observations that suggest that the eastern and western groups of China may have diverged long ago, possibly before the intercontinental differentiation between L. chinense and L. tulipifera . Genetic diversity analyses show that L. chinense has tenfold higher genetic diversity than L. tulipifera , suggesting that the complicated regions comprising east–west-orientated mountains and the Yangtze river basin (especially near 30° N latitude) in East Asia offered more successful refugia than the south–north-orientated mountain valleys in eastern North America during the Quaternary glacial period.


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