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Article|21 Jul 2025|OPEN
Evolutionary dynamics and functional divergence of the UDP-glycosyltransferases gene family revealed by a pangenome-wide analysis in tomato
Miaomiao Huang1 ,† , Peng Zheng1 ,† , Ning Li2 , Qionglin Chen1 , Yan Liu1 , Benliang Huang1 , Xiaoyuan Tao1 , Jingyin Yu1 , and Shengchun Xu,1,3 ,
1Xianghu Laboratory, Hangzhou 311231, P.R. China
2Biological Breeding Laboratory, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Urumqi, China
3Institute of Digital Agriculture, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Science, Hangzhou, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: yujingyin@xhlab.ac.cn,xushengchun@xhlab.ac.cn
Both authors contributed equally to the study.

Horticulture Research 12,
Article number: uhaf204 (2025)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhaf204
Views: 152

Received: 01 Apr 2025
Accepted: 21 Jul 2025
Published online: 21 Jul 2025

Abstract

UDP-dependent glycosyltransferases (UGTs) play a critical role in producing glycosylated metabolites that mediate plant–environment interactions. Recent studies have examined the role of UGT genes across various plant genomes. However, the evolutionary history and functional divergence of the UGT pan-gene family in the genus Solanum have not yet been explored. This study integrated data from 61 tomatoes and 9 representative genomes, ranging from algae to angiosperms, to identify 12 073 genes. The phylogeny of the UGT gene family reveals a clear evolutionary trajectory from unicellular algae to ferns, mosses, gymnosperms, and angiosperms. The study identified a significant number of tomato-specific UGT genes and explored the expansions of UGT73 and UGT85 subfamilies. The entire UGT genes (10 769) in tomato were classified into 118 orthologous gene groups, including 58 core, 31 softcore, 10 dispensable, 19 private orthologous gene groups, and the core groups contained 7811 genes, representing 72.53% of the total UGT genes. Analysis of gene family expansion revealed that whole-genome triplication and tandem duplication events play significant roles in the expansion of the UGT gene family. Selection pressure analysis revealed that the UGT genes experienced purifying selection in the genus Solanum. Additionally, expression profiles of some UGT genes in different tissues demonstrated expression divergence of multicopy genes across different UGT subfamilies due to the increase in gene dosage. Subcellular localization prediction revealed that most genes are localized in the chloroplast. These findings provide critical insights into the evolution and function of the UGT genes in tomato, laying a foundation for further exploration in adaptive evolution.