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Plant Physiology and Biochemistry 2018-Sep

De novo assembly and comparative transcriptome analysis reveals genes potentially involved in tissue-color changes in centipedegrass (Eremochloa ophiuroides [Munro] Hack.).

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Jianjian Li
Junqin Zong
Jingbo Chen
Yi Wang
Dandan Li
Ling Li
Jingjing Wang
Hailin Guo
Jianxiu Liu

Keywords

Abstract

Turf color is the most important characteristics of visual quality for a turfgrass species with high ornamental value and wide application prospects. Centipedegrass is a well-adapted warm-season turfgrass species in tropical, subtropical and temperate regions, possessing many outstanding properties including uniform green color. However, quite a few centipedegrass accessions or cultivars produce stolons and spike tissues with red-purple color, thereby decreasing their aesthetic value. A research focus in centipedegrass is to develop high-quality cultivars with uniform green color. To explore the major genes associated with the color changes in certain organs/tissues contributes to understand the molecular mechanisms of the same tissues having different phenotypic characteristics. In the present study, two phenotypically distinct centipedegrass accessions, E092 being a wild-type (WT) with red-purple stolons and spike tissues and E092-1 being a mutant (MT) with uniform green stolons and spike tissues, were used. Using the Illumina sequencing platform, approximately 401.7 million high-quality paired-end reads were obtained. After de novo assembly and quantitative assessment, 352,513 transcript sequences corresponding to 293,033 unigenes were generated with an average length of 735 bp. A total of 145,032 (49.49%) unigenes were annotated by alignment with public protein databases. Of these unigenes, 329 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified between WT and MT stolons, with 156 up-regulated and 173 down-regulated; and 829 DEGs were detected between WT and MT spike tissues, including 497 up-regulated and 332 down-regulated. The expression profile of 10 randomly selected DEGs was confirmed with RT-qPCR. Candidate genes involved in the flavonoid biosynthesis were identified showing significant transcript changes between WT and MT organs/tissues. And transcript abundances of these flavonoid biosynthetic pathway-related genes were positively correlated with the accumulation of total anthocyanin in respective organs/tissues. This assembled transcriptome of centipedegrass can be served as a global description of expressed genes of above-ground organs/tissues and provide more molecular resources for future functional characterization analysis of genomics in warm-season turfgrass. Identified genes related to centipedegrass organ/tissue changes will contribute to molecular improvement of turf quality through genetic manipulation.

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