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Article|26 Apr 2024|OPEN
Transposable elements in Rosaceae: insights into genome evolution, expression dynamics, and syntenic gene regulation
Ze Yu1 , Jiale Li1 , Hanyu Wang , Boya Ping1 , Xinchu Li1 , Zhiguang Liu1 , Bocheng Guo1 , Qiaoming Yu1 , Yangjun Zou1 , Yaqiang Sun1 , , Fengwang Ma1 , and Tao Zhao,1 ,
1State Key Laboratory for Crop Stress Resistance and High-Efficiency Production/Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Apple, College of Horticulture, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, Shaanxi 712100, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: sun1026@nwafu.edu.cn,fwm64@nwafu.edu.cn,tao.zhao@nwafu.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae118 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae118
Views: 1299

Received: 14 Dec 2023
Accepted: 17 Apr 2024
Published online: 26 Apr 2024

Abstract

Transposable elements (TEs) exert significant influence on plant genomic structure and gene expression. Here, we explored TE-related aspects across 14 Rosaceae genomes, investigating genomic distribution, transposition activity, expression patterns, and nearby differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Analyses unveiled distinct long terminal repeat retrotransposon (LTR–RT) evolutionary patterns, reflecting varied genome size changes among nine species over the past million years. In the past 2.5 million years, Rubus idaeus showed a transposition rate twice as fast as Fragaria vesca, while Pyrus bretschneideri displayed significantly faster transposition compared with Crataegus pinnatifida. Genes adjacent to recent TE insertions were linked to adversity resistance, while those near previous insertions were functionally enriched in morphogenesis, enzyme activity, and metabolic processes. Expression analysis revealed diverse responses of LTR–RTs to internal or external conditions. Furthermore, we identified 3695 pairs of syntenic DEGs proximal to TEs in Malus domestica cv. ‘Gala’ and M. domestica (GDDH13), suggesting TE insertions may contribute to varietal trait differences in these apple varieties. Our study across representative Rosaceae species underscores the pivotal role of TEs in plant genome evolution within this diverse family. It elucidates how these elements regulate syntenic DEGs on a genome-wide scale, offering insights into Rosaceae-specific genomic evolution.