Chromosome-scale genome assembly of Apocynum pictum , a drought-tolerant medicinal plant from the Tarim Basin

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Abstract

Apocynum pictum Schrenk is a semi-shrub of the Apocynaceae family with a wide distribution throughout the Tarim Basin that holds significant ecological, medicinal, and economic values. Here, we report the assembly of its chromosome-level reference genome using Nanopore long-read, Illumina HiSeq paired-end, and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture sequencing. The final assembly is 225.32 Mb in length with a scaffold N50 of 19.64 Mb. It contains 23,147 protein-coding genes across 11 chromosomes, 21,148 of which (91.36%) have protein functional annotations. Comparative genomics analysis revealed that A. pictum diverged from the closely related species Apocynum venetum approximately 2.2 million years ago and has not undergone additional polyploidizations after the core eudicot WGT-γ event. Karyotype evolution analysis was used to characterize interchromosomal rearrangements in representative Apocynaceae species and revealed that several A. pictum chromosomes were derived entirely from single chromosomes of the ancestral eudicot karyotype. Finally, we identified 50 members of the well-known stress-responsive WRKY transcription factor family and used transcriptomic data to document changes in their expression at two stages of drought stress, identifying a number of promising candidate genes. Overall, this study provides high-quality genomic resources for evolutionary and comparative genomics of the Apocynaceae, as well as initial molecular insights into the drought adaptation of this valuable desert plant.

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