4.8 Article

Improved genome assembly and pan-genome provide key insights into eggplant domestication and breeding

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 107, Issue 2, Pages 579-596

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15313

Keywords

Solanum melongena; genome assembly; whole-genome resequencing; pan-genome; pan-plastome; domestication; single nucleotide polymorphism; indel; eggplant wild relatives

Categories

Funding

  1. European Commission, Horizon 2020 G2P-SOL project [677379]

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Eggplant is an important horticultural crop with a wide genetic diversity. A study on the eggplant pan-genome revealed additional genes compared to the reference genome, with selective sweeps related to fruit color, prickliness, and fruit shape driving the evolution from wild ancestors to present-day cultivars. Candidate genes underlying these selective sweeps were identified, suggesting a common set of orthologous genes in tomato and eggplant for fruit size and shape traits.
Eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) is an important horticultural crop and one of the most widely grown vegetables from the Solanaceae family. It was domesticated from a wild, prickly progenitor carrying small, round, non-anthocyanic fruits. We obtained a novel, highly contiguous genome assembly of the eggplant '67/3' reference line, by Hi-C retrofitting of a previously released short read- and optical mapping-based assembly. The sizes of the 12 chromosomes and the fraction of anchored genes in the improved assembly were comparable to those of a chromosome-level assembly. We resequenced 23 accessions of S. melongena representative of the worldwide phenotypic, geographic, and genetic diversity of the species, and one each from the closely related species Solanum insanum and Solanum incanum. The eggplant pan-genome contained approximately 51.5 additional megabases and 816 additional genes compared with the reference genome, while the pan-plastome showed little genetic variation. We identified 53 selective sweeps related to fruit color, prickliness, and fruit shape in the nuclear genome, highlighting selection leading to the emergence of present-day S. melongena cultivars from its wild ancestors. Candidate genes underlying the selective sweeps included a MYBL1 repressor and CHALCONE ISOMERASE (for fruit color), homologs of Arabidopsis GLABRA1 and GLABROUS INFLORESCENCE STEMS2 (for prickliness), and orthologs of tomato FW2.2, OVATE, LOCULE NUMBER/WUSCHEL, SUPPRESSOR OF OVATE, and CELL SIZE REGULATOR (for fruit size/shape), further suggesting that selection for the latter trait relied on a common set of orthologous genes in tomato and eggplant.

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