AI Article Synopsis

  • Panax notoginseng is a traditional Chinese herb known for its valuable roots, primarily containing triterpenoid saponins as bioactive components that play a crucial role in medicinal uses.
  • Researchers combined advanced sequencing technologies to create a detailed transcriptome atlas, revealing new genes and alternative splicing events linked to ginsenoside biosynthesis, particularly in flowers rather than in leaves or roots.
  • The study found that roots of three-year-old plants are rich in specific saponins and showed a significant variation in ginsenoside content, contributing to the understanding of the herb's biosynthetic mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Panax notoginseng is one of the most widely used traditional Chinese herbs with particularly valued roots. Triterpenoid saponins are mainly specialized secondary metabolites, which medically act as bioactive components. Knowledge of the ginsenoside biosynthesis in P. notoginseng, which is of great importance in the industrial biosynthesis and genetic breeding program, remains largely undetermined. Here we combined single molecular real time (SMRT) and Second-Generation Sequencing (SGS) technologies to generate a widespread transcriptome atlas of P. notoginseng. We mapped 2,383 full-length non-chimeric (FLNC) reads to adjacently annotated genes, corrected 1,925 mis-annotated genes and merged into 927 new genes. We identified 8,111 novel transcript isoforms that have improved the annotation of the current genome assembly, of which we found 2,664 novel lncRNAs. We characterized more alternative splicing (AS) events from SMRT reads (20,015 AS in 6,324 genes) than Illumina reads (18,498 AS in 9,550 genes), which contained a number of AS events associated with the ginsenoside biosynthesis. The comprehensive transcriptome landscape reveals that the ginsenoside biosynthesis predominantly occurs in flowers compared to leaves and roots, substantiated by levels of gene expression, which is supported by tissue-specific abundance of isoforms in flowers compared to roots and rhizomes. Comparative metabolic analyses further show that a total of 17 characteristic ginsenosides increasingly accumulated, and roots contained the most ginsenosides with variable contents, which are extraordinarily abundant in roots of the three-year old plants. We observed that roots were rich in protopanaxatriol- and protopanaxadiol-type saponins, whereas protopanaxadiol-type saponins predominated in aerial parts (leaves, stems and flowers). The obtained results will greatly enhance our understanding about the ginsenoside biosynthetic machinery in the genus Panax.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7499265PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-72291-1DOI Listing

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