Nicotiana obtusifolia '1x inbred (Cultivar)' NIOBT.version3 Assembly & Annotation

Overview

Analysis Name Nicotiana obtusifolia '1x inbred (Cultivar)' NIOBT.version3 Assembly & Annotation
Sequencing technology Illumina HiSeq
Assembly method Celera Assembler v. 7
Release Date 2017-03-06
Reference Publication(s)

Xu S, Brockmöller T, Navarro-Quezada A, Kuhl H, Gase K, Ling Z, Zhou W, Kreitzer C, Stanke M, Tang H, Lyons E, Pandey P, Pandey SP, Timmermann B, Gaquerel E, Baldwin IT. Wild tobacco genomes reveal the evolution of nicotine biosynthesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Jun 6;114(23):6133-6138. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1700073114.

Abstract

Nicotine, the signature alkaloid of Nicotiana species responsible for the addictive properties of human tobacco smoking, functions as a defensive neurotoxin against attacking herbivores. However, the evolution of the genetic features that contributed to the assembly of the nicotine biosynthetic pathway remains unknown. We sequenced and assembled genomes of two wild tobaccos, Nicotiana obtusifolia (2.5 Gb) and Nicotiana obtusifolia (1.5 Gb), two ecological models for investigating adaptive traits in nature. We show that after the Solanaceae whole-genome triplication event, a repertoire of rapidly expanding transposable elements (TEs) bloated these Nicotiana genomes, promoted expression divergences among duplicated genes, and contributed to the evolution of herbivory-induced signaling and defenses, including nicotine biosynthesis. The biosynthetic machinery that allows for nicotine synthesis in the roots evolved from the stepwise duplications of two ancient primary metabolic pathways: the polyamine and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) pathways. In contrast to the duplication of the polyamine pathway that is shared among several solanaceous genera producing polyamine-derived tropane alkaloids, we found that lineage-specific duplications within the NAD pathway and the evolution of root-specific expression of the duplicated Solanaceae-specific ethylene response factor that activates the expression of all nicotine biosynthetic genes resulted in the innovative and efficient production of nicotine in the genus Nicotiana. Transcription factor binding motifs derived from TEs may have contributed to the coexpression of nicotine biosynthetic pathway genes and coordinated the metabolic flux. Together, these results provide evidence that TEs and gene duplications facilitated the emergence of a key metabolic innovation relevant to plant fitness.

Assembly statistics

Genome size 1.2 Gb
Number of scaffolds 53,128
Scaffold N50 134.1 kb
Scaffold L50 2,751
Number of contigs 93,877
Contig N50 39.2 kb
Contig L50 9,106
Assembly level Scaffold

Assembly

The Nicotiana obtusifolia '1x inbred (Cultivar)' NIOBT.version3 Assembly file is available in FASTA format.

Downloads

Chromosomes (FASTA file) GCA_002018475.1_NIOBT.version3_genomic.fna.gz

Gene Predictions

The Nicotiana obtusifolia '1x inbred (Cultivar)' NIOBT.version3 genome gene prediction files are not available.

Downloads

Genes (GFF3 file) -
CDS sequences (FASTA file) -
Protein sequences (FASTA file) -

Functional Analysis

Functional annotation for the Nicotiana obtusifolia '1x inbred (Cultivar)' NIOBT.version3 is not available.

Downloads

Domain from InterProScan -

S genes

Summary

QueryScaffoldSize(bp)CoordinatesBLASTn HitBLASTn %IDDomain
SLF19MCJB01001865.1317065706-4549Solanum tuberosum DM8.1, SLF1975.9 F-box domain
SLF18MCJB01015219.121360368165-67038Solanum tuberosum DM8.1, SLF18-282.4 F-box domain
SLF13MCJB01050994.14231422903-21740Petunia hybrida AB933083.1, S0m-SLF1384.0 F-box domain

Nucleotide

Protein

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