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Multispecies transcriptomes reveal core fruit development genes. | LitMetric

Multispecies transcriptomes reveal core fruit development genes.

Front Plant Sci

Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA, United States.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • During angiosperm evolution, there have been multiple shifts from dry fruits to fleshy fruits, impacting ecology and agriculture.
  • Researchers explored gene expression in pericarp tissue from various plant species, focusing on domesticated and wild tomatoes alongside other plants like desert tobacco and melon.
  • A small group of 121 "core" fruit development genes displayed consistent expression patterns across different species, indicating that despite significant morphological changes, these genes play a crucial role in fruit development.

Article Abstract

During angiosperm evolution there have been repeated transitions from an ancestral dry fruit to a derived fleshy fruit, often with dramatic ecological and economic consequences. Following the transition to fleshy fruits, domestication may also dramatically alter the fruit phenotype artificial selection. Although the morphologies of these fruits are well documented, relatively less is known about the molecular basis of these developmental and evolutionary shifts. We generated RNA-seq libraries from pericarp tissue of desert tobacco and both cultivated and wild tomato species at common developmental time points and combined this with corresponding, publicly available data from Arabidopsis and melon. With this broadly sampled dataset consisting of dry/fleshy fruits and wild/domesticated species, we applied novel bioinformatic methods to investigate conserved and divergent patterns of gene expression during fruit development and evolution. A small set of 121 orthologous "core" fruit development genes show a common pattern of expression across all five species. These include key players in developmental patterning such as orthologs of , , and . GO term enrichment suggests that these genes function in basic cell division processes, cell wall biosynthesis, and developmental patterning. We furthermore uncovered a number of "accessory" genes with conserved expression patterns within but not among fruit types, and whose functional enrichment highlights the conspicuous differences between these phenotypic classes. We observe striking conservation of gene expression patterns despite large evolutionary distances, and dramatic phenotypic shifts, suggesting a conserved function for a small subset of core fruit development genes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9673247PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.954929DOI Listing

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