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373
result(s) for
"Citrus -- Évolution"
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The genus citrus
by
Caruso, Marco
,
Gmitter, Fred G., Jr
,
Talon, Manuel
in
Agrumes
,
Citrus
,
Citrus -- Cartes chromosomiques
2020
The Genus Citrus presents the enormous amount of new knowledge that has been generated in recent years on nearly all topics related to citrus.Beginning with an overview of the fundamental principles and understanding of citrus biology and behavior, the book provides a comprehensive view from Citrus evolution to current market importance.
Genomics of the origin and evolution of Citrus
2018
The genus
Citrus
, comprising some of the most widely cultivated fruit crops worldwide, includes an uncertain number of species. Here we describe ten natural citrus species, using genomic, phylogenetic and biogeographic analyses of 60 accessions representing diverse citrus germ plasms, and propose that citrus diversified during the late Miocene epoch through a rapid southeast Asian radiation that correlates with a marked weakening of the monsoons. A second radiation enabled by migration across the Wallace line gave rise to the Australian limes in the early Pliocene epoch. Further identification and analyses of hybrids and admixed genomes provides insights into the genealogy of major commercial cultivars of citrus. Among mandarins and sweet orange, we find an extensive network of relatedness that illuminates the domestication of these groups. Widespread pummelo admixture among these mandarins and its correlation with fruit size and acidity suggests a plausible role of pummelo introgression in the selection of palatable mandarins. This work provides a new evolutionary framework for the genus
Citrus
.
The origin, evolution and domestication of
Citrus
and the genealogy of the most important wild and cultivated citrus varieties.
When life gave us lemons
Citrus fruits are one of the most cultivated crops worldwide, yet the evolutionary relationships among citrus species remain uncertain. Daniel Rokhsar, Manuel Talon and colleagues analyse the genomes of 60 accessions that represent a diverse range of citrus species, including 30 newly sequenced citrus genomes. They characterize the diversity and evolution of citrus at the species level and identify interspecific citrus hybrids and admixtures—genetic mixing between previously isolated populations—that could be the result of human activities such as migration and agriculture. The authors identify 10 progenitor species and suggest that citrus originated in southeast Asia, diversifying during the late Miocene epoch through a rapid southeast Asian radiation that correlated with a changing climate, including the weakening of the monsoons. They also find extensive relatedness among mandarins and sweet oranges, showing a complex history of admixture during the domestication of these groups.
Journal Article
Assessing genetic diversity and population structure in a citrus germplasm collection utilizing simple sequence repeat markers (SSRs)
by
Barkley, N.A
,
Krueger, R.R
,
Roose, M.L
in
Alleles
,
Bayes Theorem
,
Biological and medical sciences
2006
Twenty-four simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers were used to detect molecular polymorphisms among 370 mostly sexually derived Citrus accessions from the collection of citrus germplasm maintained at the University of California, Riverside. A total of 275 alleles were detected with an average of 11.5 alleles per locus and an average polymorphism information content of 0.625. Genetic diversity statistics were calculated for each individual SSR marker, the entire population, and for specified Citrus groups. Phylogenetic relationships among all citrus accessions and putative non-hybrid Citrus accessions were determined by constructing neighbor-joining trees. There was strong support for monophyly at the species level when hybrid taxa were removed from the data set. Both of these trees indicate that Fortunella clusters within the genus Citrus but Poncirus is a sister genus to Citrus. Additionally, Citrus accessions were probabilistically assigned to populations or multiple populations if their genotype indicated an admixture by a model-based clustering approach. This approach identified five populations in this data set. These separate analyses (distance and model based) both support the hypothesis that there are only a few naturally occurring species of Citrus and most other types of Citrus arose through various hybridization events between these naturally occurring forms.
Journal Article
Pangenome analysis provides insight into the evolution of the orange subfamily and a key gene for citric acid accumulation in citrus fruits
2023
The orange subfamily (Aurantioideae) contains several
Citrus
species cultivated worldwide, such as sweet orange and lemon. The origin of
Citrus
species has long been debated and less is known about the Aurantioideae. Here, we compiled the genome sequences of 314 accessions, de novo assembled the genomes of 12 species and constructed a graph-based pangenome for Aurantioideae. Our analysis indicates that the ancient Indian Plate is the ancestral area for
Citrus
-related genera and that South Central China is the primary center of origin of the
Citrus
genus. We found substantial variations in the sequence and expression of the
PH4
gene in
Citrus
relative to
Citrus
-related genera. Gene editing and biochemical experiments demonstrate a central role for
PH4
in the accumulation of citric acid in citrus fruits. This study provides insights into the origin and evolution of the orange subfamily and a regulatory mechanism underpinning the evolution of fruit taste.
De novo genome assemblies of 12 species from Aurantioideae and pangenome analyses provide insights into the origin and evolution of the orange subfamily and the genetic basis of flavor in citrus fruits.
Journal Article
Genome-wide characterization, evolution and expression profiling of UDP-glycosyltransferase family in pomelo (Citrus grandis) fruit
2020
Background
Pomelo is one of the three major species of citrus. The fruit accumulates a variety of abundant secondary metabolites that affect the flavor. UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs) are involved in the glycosylation of secondary metabolites.
Results
In the present study, we performed a genome-wide analysis of pomelo
UGT
family, a total of 145 UGTs was identified based on the conserved plant secondary product glycosyltransferase (PSPG) motif. These
UGT
genes were clustered into 16 major groups through phylogenetic analysis of these genes with other plant UGTs (A-P). Pomelo UGTs were distributed unevenly among the chromosomes. At least 10 intron insertion events were observed in these
UGT
genome sequences, and I-5 was identified to be the highest conserved one. The expression profile analysis of pomelo
UGT
genes in different fruit tissues during development and ripening was carried out by RNA-seq.
Conclusions
We identified 145 UGTs in pomelo fruit through transcriptome data and citrus genome database. Our research provides available information on UGTs studies in pomelo, and provides an important research foundation for screening and identification of functional
UGT
genes.
Journal Article
Sequencing of diverse mandarin, pummelo and orange genomes reveals complex history of admixture during citrus domestication
2014
Genome sequences of nine species of citrus, including oranges, pummelos and mandarins, reveal pathways of domestication and provide resources for breeding.
Cultivated citrus are selections from, or hybrids of, wild progenitor species whose identities and contributions to citrus domestication remain controversial. Here we sequence and compare citrus genomes—a high-quality reference haploid clementine genome and mandarin, pummelo, sweet-orange and sour-orange genomes—and show that cultivated types derive from two progenitor species. Although cultivated pummelos represent selections from one progenitor species,
Citrus maxima
, cultivated mandarins are introgressions of
C. maxima
into the ancestral mandarin species
Citrus reticulata
. The most widely cultivated citrus, sweet orange, is the offspring of previously admixed individuals, but sour orange is an F1 hybrid of pure
C. maxima
and
C. reticulata
parents, thus implying that wild mandarins were part of the early breeding germplasm. A Chinese wild 'mandarin' diverges substantially from
C. reticulata
, thus suggesting the possibility of other unrecognized wild citrus species. Understanding citrus phylogeny through genome analysis clarifies taxonomic relationships and facilitates sequence-directed genetic improvement.
Journal Article
Two previously unknown Phytophthora species associated with brown rot of Pomelo (Citrus grandis) fruits in Vietnam
by
Cacciola, Santa Olga
,
Schena, Leonardo
,
Van Hoa, Nguyen
in
1969
,
1993
,
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
2017
Two distinct Phytophthora taxa were found to be associated with brown rot of pomelo (Citrus grandis), a new disease of this ancestral Citrus species, in the Vinh Long province, Mekong River Delta area, southern Vietnam. On the basis of morphological characters and using the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region of the rDNA and the cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI) as barcode genes, one of the two taxa was provisionally named as Phytophthora sp. prodigiosa, being closely related to but distinct from P. insolita, a species in Phytophthora Clade 9, while the other one, was closely related to but distinct from the Clade 2 species P. meadii and was informally designated as Phytophthora sp. mekongensis. Isolates of P. sp. prodigiosa and P. sp. mekongensis were also obtained from necrotic fibrous roots of Volkamer lemon (C. volkameriana) rootstocks grafted with 'King' mandarin (Citrus nobilis) and from trees of pomelo, respectively, in other provinces of the Mekong River Delta, indicating a widespread occurrence of both Phytophthora species in this citrus-growing area. Koch's postulates were fulfilled via pathogenicity tests on fruits of various Citrus species, including pomelo, grapefruit (Citrus x paradisi), sweet orange (Citrus x sinensis) and bergamot (Citrus x bergamia) as well as on the rootstock of 2-year-old trees of pomelo and sweet orange on 'Carrizo' citrange (C. sinensis 'Washington Navel' x Poncirus trifoliata). This is the first report of a Phytophthora species from Clade 2 other than P. citricola and P. citrophthora as causal agent of fruit brown rot of Citrus worldwide and the first report of P. insolita complex in Vietnam. Results indicate that likely Vietnam is still an unexplored reservoir of Phytophthora diversity.
Journal Article
Genotyping by sequencing reveals the interspecific C. maxima / C. reticulata admixture along the genomes of modern citrus varieties of mandarins, tangors, tangelos, orangelos and grapefruits
by
Oueslati, Amel
,
Salhi-Hannachi, Amel
,
Vignes, Hélène
in
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Chromosomes
,
Citrus
2017
The mandarin horticultural group is an important component of world citrus production for the fresh fruit market. This group formerly classified as C. reticulata is highly polymorphic and recent molecular studies have suggested that numerous cultivated mandarins were introgressed by C. maxima (the pummelos). C. maxima and C. reticulata are also the ancestors of sweet and sour oranges, grapefruit, and therefore of all the \"small citrus\" modern varieties (mandarins, tangors, tangelos) derived from sexual hybridization between these horticultural groups. Recently, NGS technologies have greatly modified how plant evolution and genomic structure are analyzed, moving from phylogenetics to phylogenomics. The objective of this work was to develop a workflow for phylogenomic inference from Genotyping By Sequencing (GBS) data and to analyze the interspecific admixture along the nine citrus chromosomes for horticultural groups and recent varieties resulting from the combination of the C. reticulata and C. maxima gene pools. A GBS library was established from 55 citrus varieties, using the ApekI restriction enzyme and selective PCR to improve the read depth. Diagnostic polymorphisms (DPs) of C. reticulata/C. maxima differentiation were identified and used to decipher the phylogenomic structure of the 55 varieties. The GBS approach was powerful and revealed 30,289 SNPs and 8,794 Indels with 12.6% of missing data. 11,133 DPs were selected covering the nine chromosomes with a higher density in genic regions. GBS combined with the detection of DPs was powerful for deciphering the \"phylogenomic karyotypes\" of cultivars derived from admixture of the two ancestral species after a limited number of interspecific recombinations. All the mandarins, mandarin hybrids, tangelos and tangors analyzed displayed introgression of C. maxima in different parts of the genome. C. reticulata/C. maxima admixture should be a major component of the high phenotypic variability of this germplasm opening up the way for association studies based on phylogenomics.
Journal Article
Diversity and Evolution of NLR Genes in Citrus Species
2024
NLR genes are crucial components of the effector-triggered immunity (ETI) system, responsible for recognizing pathogens and initiating immune responses. Although NLR genes in many plant species have been extensively studied, the diversity of NLR genes in citrus remains largely unknown. Our analysis revealed significant variations in the copy numbers of NLR genes among these species. Gene duplication and recombination were identified as the major driving forces behind this diversity. Additionally, horizontal gene transfer (HGT) emerged as the principal mechanism responsible for the increase in NLR gene copy number in A. buxifolia. The citrus NLR genes were classified into four categories: TIR-NBS-LRR (TNL), CC-NBS-LRR (CNL), RPW8-NBS-LRR (RNL), and NL. Our findings indicate that TNL, RNL, and CNL genes originated from NL genes through the acquisition of TIR and RPW8 domains, along with CC motifs, followed by the random loss of corresponding domains. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that citrus NLR genes originated alongside the species and underwent adaptive evolution, potentially playing crucial roles in the global colonization of citrus. This study provides important insights into the diversity of citrus NLR genes and serves as a foundational dataset for future research aimed at breeding disease-resistant citrus varieties.
Journal Article
The draft genome of sweet orange (Citrus sinensis)
2013
Yijun Ruan and colleagues report the draft genome of the sweet orange,
Citrus sinensis
. Their data suggests sweet orange originated from a cross between pummelo and mandarin.
Oranges are an important nutritional source for human health and have immense economic value. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of the draft genome of sweet orange (
Citrus sinensis
). The assembled sequence covers 87.3% of the estimated orange genome, which is relatively compact, as 20% is composed of repetitive elements. We predicted 29,445 protein-coding genes, half of which are in the heterozygous state. With additional sequencing of two more citrus species and comparative analyses of seven citrus genomes, we present evidence to suggest that sweet orange originated from a backcross hybrid between pummelo and mandarin. Focused analysis on genes involved in vitamin C metabolism showed that
GalUR
, encoding the rate-limiting enzyme of the galacturonate pathway, is significantly upregulated in orange fruit, and the recent expansion of this gene family may provide a genomic basis. This draft genome represents a valuable resource for understanding and improving many important citrus traits in the future.
Journal Article