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Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway

Endives (Cichorium endivia L.) are popular vegetables, diversified into curly/frisée- and smooth/broad-leafed (escaroles) cultivar types (cultigroups), and consumed as fresh and bagged salads. They are rich in sesquiterpene lactones (STL) that exert proven function on bitter taste and human health....

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Autores principales: Testone, Giulio, Mele, Giovanni, di Giacomo, Elisabetta, Tenore, Gian Carlo, Gonnella, Maria, Nicolodi, Chiara, Frugis, Giovanna, Iannelli, Maria Adelaide, Arnesi, Giuseppe, Schiappa, Alessandro, Biancari, Tiziano, Giannino, Donato
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6312536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30603088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0066-6
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author Testone, Giulio
Mele, Giovanni
di Giacomo, Elisabetta
Tenore, Gian Carlo
Gonnella, Maria
Nicolodi, Chiara
Frugis, Giovanna
Iannelli, Maria Adelaide
Arnesi, Giuseppe
Schiappa, Alessandro
Biancari, Tiziano
Giannino, Donato
author_facet Testone, Giulio
Mele, Giovanni
di Giacomo, Elisabetta
Tenore, Gian Carlo
Gonnella, Maria
Nicolodi, Chiara
Frugis, Giovanna
Iannelli, Maria Adelaide
Arnesi, Giuseppe
Schiappa, Alessandro
Biancari, Tiziano
Giannino, Donato
author_sort Testone, Giulio
collection PubMed
description Endives (Cichorium endivia L.) are popular vegetables, diversified into curly/frisée- and smooth/broad-leafed (escaroles) cultivar types (cultigroups), and consumed as fresh and bagged salads. They are rich in sesquiterpene lactones (STL) that exert proven function on bitter taste and human health. The assembly of a reference transcriptome of 77,022 unigenes and RNA-sequencing experiments were carried out to characterize the differences between endives and escaroles at the gene structural and expression levels. A set of 3177 SNPs distinguished smooth from curly cultivars, and an SNP-supported phylogenetic tree separated the cultigroups into two distinct clades, consistently with the botanical varieties of origin (crispum and latifolium, respectively). A pool of 699 genes maintained differential expression pattern (core-DEGs) in pairwise comparisons between curly vs smooth cultivars grown in the same environment. Accurate annotation allowed the identification of 26 genes in the sesquiterpenoid biosynthesis pathway, which included several germacrene A synthase, germacrene A oxidase and costunolide synthase members (GAS/GAO/COS module), required for the synthesis of costunolide, a key precursor of lactucopicrin- and lactucin-like sesquiterpene lactones. The core-DEGs contained a GAS gene (contig83192) that was positively correlated with STL levels and recurrently more expressed in curly than smooth endives, suggesting a cultigroup-specific behavior. The significant positive correlation of GAS/GAO/COS transcription and STL abundance (2.4-fold higher in frisée endives) suggested that sesquiterpenoid pathway control occurs at the transcriptional level. Based on correlation analyses, five transcription factors (MYB, MYB-related and WRKY) were inferred to act on contig83192/GAS and specific STL, suggesting the occurrence of two distinct routes in STL biosynthesis.
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spelling pubmed-63125362019-01-02 Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway Testone, Giulio Mele, Giovanni di Giacomo, Elisabetta Tenore, Gian Carlo Gonnella, Maria Nicolodi, Chiara Frugis, Giovanna Iannelli, Maria Adelaide Arnesi, Giuseppe Schiappa, Alessandro Biancari, Tiziano Giannino, Donato Hortic Res Article Endives (Cichorium endivia L.) are popular vegetables, diversified into curly/frisée- and smooth/broad-leafed (escaroles) cultivar types (cultigroups), and consumed as fresh and bagged salads. They are rich in sesquiterpene lactones (STL) that exert proven function on bitter taste and human health. The assembly of a reference transcriptome of 77,022 unigenes and RNA-sequencing experiments were carried out to characterize the differences between endives and escaroles at the gene structural and expression levels. A set of 3177 SNPs distinguished smooth from curly cultivars, and an SNP-supported phylogenetic tree separated the cultigroups into two distinct clades, consistently with the botanical varieties of origin (crispum and latifolium, respectively). A pool of 699 genes maintained differential expression pattern (core-DEGs) in pairwise comparisons between curly vs smooth cultivars grown in the same environment. Accurate annotation allowed the identification of 26 genes in the sesquiterpenoid biosynthesis pathway, which included several germacrene A synthase, germacrene A oxidase and costunolide synthase members (GAS/GAO/COS module), required for the synthesis of costunolide, a key precursor of lactucopicrin- and lactucin-like sesquiterpene lactones. The core-DEGs contained a GAS gene (contig83192) that was positively correlated with STL levels and recurrently more expressed in curly than smooth endives, suggesting a cultigroup-specific behavior. The significant positive correlation of GAS/GAO/COS transcription and STL abundance (2.4-fold higher in frisée endives) suggested that sesquiterpenoid pathway control occurs at the transcriptional level. Based on correlation analyses, five transcription factors (MYB, MYB-related and WRKY) were inferred to act on contig83192/GAS and specific STL, suggesting the occurrence of two distinct routes in STL biosynthesis. Nature Publishing Group UK 2019-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6312536/ /pubmed/30603088 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0066-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Testone, Giulio
Mele, Giovanni
di Giacomo, Elisabetta
Tenore, Gian Carlo
Gonnella, Maria
Nicolodi, Chiara
Frugis, Giovanna
Iannelli, Maria Adelaide
Arnesi, Giuseppe
Schiappa, Alessandro
Biancari, Tiziano
Giannino, Donato
Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title_full Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title_fullStr Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title_short Transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
title_sort transcriptome driven characterization of curly- and smooth-leafed endives reveals molecular differences in the sesquiterpenoid pathway
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6312536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30603088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0066-6
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