4.5 Article

Complexity of gene paralogues resolved in biosynthetic pathway of hepatoprotective iridoid glycosides in a medicinal herb, Picrorhiza kurroa through differential NGS transcriptomes

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 296, Issue 4, Pages 863-876

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00438-021-01787-w

Keywords

Gene paralogues; Picrorhiza kurroa; NGS transcriptome; TPM; Picrosides

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India [BT/COE/34/SP15268/2015]

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By studying the differential transcriptomes of Picrorhiza kurroa in different tissues with varying P-I and P-II contents, paralogues of pathway genes associated with P-I and P-II contents have been identified and prioritized.
Picrorhiza kurroa is a medicinal herb with diverse pharmacological applications due to the presence of iridoid glycosides, picroside-I (P-I), and picroside-II (P-II), among others. Any genetic improvement in this medicinal herb can only be undertaken if the biosynthetic pathway genes are correctly identified. Our previous studies have deciphered biosynthetic pathways for P-I and P-II, however, the occurrence of multiple copies of genes has been a stumbling block in their usage. Therefore, a methodological strategy was designed to identify and prioritize paralogues of pathway genes associated with contents of P-I and P-II. We used differential transcriptomes varying for P-I and P-II contents in different tissues of P. kurroa. All transcripts for a particular pathway gene were identified, clustered based on multiple sequence alignment to notify as a representative of the same gene (>= 99% sequence identity) or a paralogue of the same gene. Further, individual paralogues were tested for their expression level via qRT-PCR in tissue-specific manner. In total 44 paralogues in 14 key genes have been identified out of which 19 gene paralogues showed the highest expression pattern via qRT-PCR. Overall analysis shortlisted 6 gene paralogues, PKHMGR3, PKPAL2, PKDXPS1, PK4CL2, PKG10H2 and PKIS2 that might be playing role in the biosynthesis of P-I and P-II, however, their functional analysis need to be further validated either through gene silencing or over-expression. The usefulness of this approach can be expanded to other non-model plant species for which transcriptome resources have been generated.

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