W222 Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) genome sequencing and comparative analysis

Date: Sunday, January 15, 2012
Time: 4:50 PM
Room: Pacific Salon 1
Rafal Woycicki , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Justyna Witkowicz , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Piotr Gawronski , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Joanna Dabrowska , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Alexandre Lomsadze , Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA
Magdalena Pawelkowicz , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Ewa Siedlecka , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Kohei Yagi , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Wojciech Plader , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Anna Seroczynska , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Mieczyslaw Smiech , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Wojciech Gutman , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Katarzyna Niemirowicz-Szczytt , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Grzegorz Bartoszewski , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Norikazu Tagashira , Hiroshima Jogakuin University, Higashi-ku, Japan
Yoshikazu Hoshi , Tokai University, Minamiaso-mura, Japan
Mark Borodovsky , Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA
Stanislaw Karpinski , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Stefan Malepszy , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Zbigniew Przybecki , Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.), a widely cultivated crop, has originated from Eastern Himalayas and secondary domestication regions includes highly divergent climate conditions e.g. temperate and subtropical. We wanted to uncover adaptive genome differences between the cucumber cultivars and what sort of evolutionary molecular mechanisms regulate genetic adaptation of plants to different ecosystems and organism biodiversity. Here we present the draft genome sequence of the Cucumis sativus genome of the North-European Borszczagowski cultivar (line B10) and comparative genomics studies with the known genomes of: C. sativus (Chinese cultivar – Chinese Long (line 9930)), Arabidopsis thalianaPopulus trichocarpa and Oryza sativa. Cucumber genomes show extensive chromosomal rearrangements, distinct differences in quantity of the particular genes as well as in distributions of abscisic acid-, dehydration- and ethylene-responsive cis-regulatory elements (CREs) in promoters of orthologous group of genes, which lead to the specific adaptation features. Abscisic acid treatment of non-acclimated Arabidopsis and C. sativus seedlings induced moderate freezing tolerance in Arabidopsis but not in C. sativus. This experiment together with analysis of abscisic acid-specific CRE distributions give a clue why C. sativus is much more susceptible to moderate freezing stresses than A. thaliana. Comparative analysis of all the five genomes showed that, each species and/or cultivars has a specific profile of CRE content in promoters of orthologous genes. Our results constitute the substantial and original resource for the basic and applied research on environmental adaptations of plants, which could facilitate creation of new crops with improved growth and yield in divergent conditions.