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First published online May 16, 2008; 10.1104/pp.107.115618 Plant Physiology 147:985-1003 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Multiple Models for Rosaceae Genomics[OA]Virginia Bioinformatics Institute and Department of Horticulture, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061 (V.S., R.E.V.); Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801 (S.S.K.); Department of Horticultural Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695 (B.S.); Department of Genetics and Biochemistry, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634 (A.G.A.); Department of Plant Pathology (H.S.A.), and New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Department of Horticultural Sciences (S.K.B.), Cornell University, Geneva, New York 14456; Horticultural Sciences Department and Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, Gainesville, Florida 32611 (K.M.F.); Department of Horticulture, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824 (A.I.); Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164 (D.M.); Institut de Recerca i Technologia Agroalimentàries (IRTA), Centre de Recerca en Agrigenòmica (CSIC-IRTA-UAB), 08348 Cabrils, Barcelona, Spain (P.A.); Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California 95616 (A.M.D., D.P.); United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, Genetic Improvement of Fruits and Vegetables Lab, BARC-West, Beltsville, Maryland 20705 (K.L.); Department of Plant Biology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 03824 (T.M.D.); and HortResearch, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand (S.E.G.)
The plant family Rosaceae consists of over 100 genera and 3,000 species that include many important fruit, nut, ornamental, and wood crops. Members of this family provide high-value nutritional foods and contribute desirable aesthetic and industrial products. Most rosaceous crops have been enhanced by human intervention through sexual hybridization, asexual propagation, and genetic improvement since ancient times, 4,000 to 5,000 B.C. Modern breeding programs have contributed to the selection and release of numerous cultivars having significant economic impact on the U.S. and world markets. In recent years, the Rosaceae community, both in the United States and internationally, has benefited from newfound organization and collaboration that have hastened progress in developing genetic and genomic resources for representative crops such as apple (Malus spp.), peach (Prunus spp.), and strawberry (Fragaria spp.). These resources, including expressed sequence tags, bacterial artificial chromosome libraries, physical and genetic maps, and molecular markers, combined with genetic transformation protocols and bioinformatics tools, have rendered various rosaceous crops highly amenable to comparative and functional genomics studies. This report serves as a synopsis of the resources and initiatives of the Rosaceae community, recent developments in Rosaceae genomics, and plans to apply newly accumulated knowledge and resources toward breeding and crop improvement.
Rosaceae, comprised of over 100 genera and 3,000 species, is the third most economically important plant family in temperate regions (Dirlewanger et al., 2002
The Rosaceous tree genera, including Malus, Pyrus, and Prunus, are predominantly grown for their fruit and originated in regions extending from Asia west to the Caucasus (Vavilov, 1951 During ancient times, rosaceous fruits populated native human habitats, and fruits from these species were valuable sources of food. Subsequent centuries of selection and domestication produced the dramatic increase in fleshy fruit size that distinguishes today's commercial fruit from their wild relatives.
The economic importance of edible rosaceous crops derives from their flavorful fruits and nuts that provide unique contributions to dietary choices of consumers and overall human health. Rosaceous fruits are consumed in multiple forms, including fresh, dried, juice, and processed products. The variety of flavors, textures, and levels of sweetness and acidity offered by these fruits satisfies diverse consumer tastes and choices. Rosaceae fruits are also a major human dietary source of phytochemicals, such as flavonoids and other phenolic compounds, cyanogenic glucosides, phytoestrogens (Mazur et al., 2000
Epidemiological evidence suggests that diets rich in fruit and vegetables significantly reduce cancer risk (Caragay, 1992
Throughout the past century, agricultural research has focused on increasing crop production to feed the growing human population. However, as malnutrition and infectious and nutrition-related diseases remain common, the research focus has begun to shift to include improving the dietary value of different foods and identifying novel compounds with pharmacological properties (Kishore and Shewmaker, 1999 The profitable production of desirable fruits and nuts can be challenging, as rosaceous crop producers must balance stringent quality expectations with yield requirements, cost efficiency, and shipping/marketing constraints. A further challenge is to maintain crop quality following harvest while avoiding loss due to chilling injury disorders, decay, chemical contamination, and overripening. Thus, postharvest and consumer-valued qualities and traits serve as ideal targets for crop product improvement. Complementary to the inescapable economic realities of crop production and distribution, consumer perception of quality characteristics deserves recognition as a primary driving force for cultivar development and establishment of research priorities. Consumers make quality judgments based on sensory perception (including smell, taste, and appearance) as well as perceived nutritional value. The flavor quality of fruits and nuts is determined by many criteria, including firmness, juiciness, sweetness, acidity, aroma, and texture. Recent consumer interests in purchasing locally produced fruits and vegetables have highlighted the importance of rosaceous fruits and invigorated their production in areas having relative proximity to large population centers. Rosaceous crop products are valued precisely because of their nutritional and aesthetic qualities, thereby offering opportunities for varietal improvement aimed at both problem-solving and market expansion. The impressive gains achieved by conventional breeding notwithstanding, the translation of structural and functional genomics research into breeding tools and broadened research perspectives offers unprecedented opportunities for rapid and sustainable enhancement of value to all stakeholders.
The Rosaceae family has been traditionally divided into four subfamilies grouped by fruit type. These include: Rosoideae (Rosa, Fragaria, Potentilla, and Rubus; fruit, achene; x = 7, 8, or 9), Prunoideae (Prunus; fruit, drupe; x = 8), Spiraeoideae (Spirea; fruit, follicle or capsule; x = 9), and Maloideae (Malus, Pyrus, and Cotoneaster; fruit, pome; x = 17; Potter et al., 2002
Patterns of diversification within the Rosaceae, combined with the need for rapid translation of genomics research into agronomic practice, suggest that multiple rosaceous species must be designated as reference models for acquisition of genomic information. Currently, the best-developed model species for Rosaceae include apple, peach (Prunus persica), and diploid strawberry (Fragaria vesca; Table I ). There is no widely accepted model for Dryadoideae, and because there are no major commercial crops within this subfamily, it will not be a focus of this report. Each of the three designated models represents a distant subtaxon within Rosaceae, and each has unique features making it well suited for targeted genomic research. Combined efforts toward developing integrated genetic and genomic resources in three diverse and representative species will advance genomic research in all rosaceous species.
Apple, a pome fruit in which the floral receptacle is the fleshy edible tissue, is the most important deciduous tree fruit crop grown in the United States and around the world. The genus Malus has more than 25 species and hybrids; most apple cultivars are diploid (2n = 2x = 34), self-incompatible, and have a juvenile period of 3 to 7 years (Korban and Chen, 1992
The apple genome, at 1.54 pg DNA/2C nucleus or 750 Mb per haploid genome complement, is approximately the same size as that of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum; Tatum et al., 2005
Two bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries were constructed (Xu et al., 2001
Prunus has characteristic stone fruits or drupes in which seeds are encased in a hard, lignified endocarp (the stone), and the edible portion is a juicy mesocarp. Agriculturally important stone fruit species include P. persica (peach, nectarine), Prunus domestica (European or prune plum), Prunus salicina (Japanese plum), Prunus cerasus (sour cherry), Prunus avium (sweet cherry), Prunus armeniaca (apricot), and Prunus amygdalus (almond). The peach karyotype (x = 8) has a clearly identifiable, large submetacentric chromosome and seven smaller chromosomes, two of which are acrocentric (Jelenkovic and Harrington, 1972
All commercial peach cultivars belong to P. persica, including nectarines, which differ from peach by the absence of pubescence on the fruit surface. This characteristic segregates as a simple trait, and it is presumably controlled by a single gene or a few closely linked genes. Unlike most congeneric species that exhibit gametophytic self-incompatibility, the peach is self-compatible. Breeding cultivars through self-pollination (Miller et al., 1989
Various Prunus maps connected with anchor markers can be found at the Genome Database for Rosaceae (GDR; see below), including more than 2,000 markers, the backbone of which is the reference Prunus map. This consensus map has been constructed with an interspecific almond x peach F2 population (Texas x Earlygold) and currently has 827 transportable markers covering a total distance of 524 cM (average density of 0.63 cM/marker; Howad et al., 2005
The cultivated strawberry with its accessory fruit comprised of a fleshy receptacle bearing many achenes (the "true" fruit) is genomically complex due to its octoploid (2n = 8x = 56) composition (Davis et al., 2007
The current, provisional model of the octoploid strawberry genome constitution is AAA'A'BBB'B' (Bringhurst, 1990
One ancestral diploid strawberry, F. vesca, has emerged as an attractive system for both structural and functional genomics due to its many favorable features (Folta and Davis, 2006
An efficient transformation protocol renders F. vesca amenable to genetic manipulation (El Mansouri et al., 1996 Diploid strawberry has several additional advantages over other widely used model species. Unlike the dry siliques of Arabidopsis, the fleshy strawberry fruit allows for studying the molecular mechanisms of fruit development and ripening. Furthermore, strawberry fruit has several unique properties, including nonclimacteric ripening and unusual metabolites that cannot be studied in traditional fruit models, such as tomato.
Recent evidence, based on nucleotide sequence data, has revealed a close phylogenetic relationship between Fragaria and Rosa (Potter et al., 2007
The Rosaceae genomics initiative, like those of other crop groups, exploits and extends the fundamental knowledge generated in the Arabidopsis model system, which has dramatically advanced our understanding of the physiology, biochemistry, genetics, and evolution of plants. Arabidopsis is characterized by its small genome, ease of transformation, rapid regeneration time, and sexual fecundity. As extensive forward and reverse genetic resources are available, this renders Arabidopsis an agile system for exploring fundamental biological questions. The genomic information generated directly from Arabidopsis has proven to translate well to other Brassicaceae. However, Arabidopsis shares only partial functional overlaps with many crop plants in more phylogenetically remote plant families. Here, other suitable research-friendly species have been established as family-specific models, including Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus for Fabaceae, rice (Oryza sativa) and Brachypodium for Poaceae, and tomato and potato (Solanum tuberosum) for Solanaceae. For families with valuable crop species, genomics has progressed by selecting a representative model species for the family and focusing research efforts on developing genomic tools for that system. Findings are then translated directly to other related species of agricultural importance.
In recent years, the application of molecular technologies has steadily increased for Rosaceae (Hokanson, 2001
Linkage mapping in Rosaceae has been conducted on a wide range of germplasm, including most of the important cultivated species. Genetic maps have been developed for different species of Prunus, including peach (Yamamoto et al., 2005
Marker-Assisted Breeding
Markers tightly linked to major genes for important traits, such as disease and pest resistances, fruit or nut quality, and self-incompatibility, have been developed in apple (Bus et al., 2000
Most rosaceous crops are characterized by long generation cycles and large plant size; hence, the ability to eliminate undesirable progenies in breeding populations through MAS reduces cost and allows breeders to focus on populations comprised of individuals carrying desirable alleles of genes of interest. In peach, Etienne et al. (2002) The development of additional markers for MAS is dependent on the ability to perform genome scans of a progeny from a population segregating for a trait of interest and then validating the trait-marker association(s) in alternate populations. However, in many rosaceous species, a genome scan is currently not possible due to a lack of evenly distributed markers that are polymorphic in the respective breeding population. Thus, marker development remains a top priority in most, if not all, rosaceous crops.
BAC Libraries
Large-insert BAC and cosmid/fosmid libraries have been constructed for peach and apricot (Georgi et al., 2002
Physical maps are important resources for positional cloning, marker development, QTL mapping, and cloning. They serve as useful platforms for whole-genome sequencing efforts. Physical maps are available for several Rosaceae species, including peach and apple. The current physical map of peach is estimated to cover 287.1 Mb of the approximate peach genome size of 290 Mb (Baird et al., 1994
A BAC-based physical map of the apple genome from 74,281 BAC clones representing approximately 10.5x haploid equivalents has been constructed (Han et al., 2007
Full genome sequencing is an invaluable tool for plant researchers. The Rosaceae community will benefit greatly from sequencing genomes of the representative models for each of the three subfamilies. At present, the largest publicly available genomic sequence resource in Rosaceae is that of F. vesca, from which approximately 1.75 Mb of genomic sequence derived from 50 genomic sites (as fosmid clones) has been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers EU024823 to EU024872. Preliminary analysis of these sequences has revealed a gene density of about one gene per 6 kb and a simple sequence repeat (SSR) density of about one SSR locus per 5 kb (Folta and Davis, 2006
Peach is a prime candidate for complete sequencing among Rosaceae models, because it has a comparatively small genome and close structural genomic relationship to many other important fruit crops (Dirlewanger et al., 2004b
Complete sequencing of several plant genomes, including Arabidopsis and rice, has identified tens of thousands of genes. About one-half are of unknown function. A major challenge for genomics is to identify the functions of unassigned genes and use this knowledge to improve economically important agronomic and quality traits in major crops.
EST sequencing projects are under way for several rosaceous species. ESTs enable gene and marker discovery, aid genome annotation and gene structure identification, guide single nucleotide polymorphism characterization and aid proteome analysis (Nagaraj et al., 2007 EST sequencing projects in peach are being conducted in several laboratories worldwide. Many of these projects have focused on fruit development, so other tissues are underrepresented in the database. All publicly available ESTs for peach have been downloaded from NCBI and housed in GDR. There are currently approximately 87,751 ESTs with a unigene set comprised of 23,721 different sequences. These ESTs have come predominantly from laboratories of the Prunus Genome Mapping consortium, supported by the USDA Initiative for Future Agricultural and Food Systems program (Albert Abbott), ESTree (Carlo Pozzi), and the Chile Consortium (Ariel Orellano). Approximately 50,000 EST sequences from F. vesca and several thousand from Fragaria xananassa have been deposited in GenBank by several contributing laboratories. From F. vesca, cDNA libraries have sampled cold-, heat-, and salt-stressed seedlings (J.P. Slovin and P.D. Rabinowitz, unpublished data), and flower buds (R.L. Brese and T.M. Davis, unpublished data). These sequences have proven invaluable for annotation of Fragaria genomic sequences and as a source of candidate gene and random clones for use in reverse genetics investigations. Nevertheless, when EST sequence resources are considered, development of libraries and strawberry sequencing has lagged behind other major fruit crops and warrants further investment in genomic resource development. Cultivated strawberry represents a potential diverse source of alleles that may be directly relevant to selected traits of interest. Furthermore, an accounting of alleles may further illuminate the ancient diploid contributors to the octoploid strawberry genome.
The GDR development team has assembled and analyzed genera-specific unigenes for approximately 370,000 Rosaceae ESTs available at the GDR Web site (Jung et al., 2008
Two fundamentally different approaches are currently being used to elucidate gene function. A forward genetics approach begins with the observation of a unique phenotype and seeks to identify the gene(s) responsible for that phenotype. Conversely, reverse genetics begins with a candidate gene and describes the mutant phenotypes that result upon its disruption. Despite the fact that small genomes render forward genetics a potentially useful strategy for gene discovery, currently there are few forward-genetic populations available for rosaceous crops.
One approach to generating mutant phenotypes in plants is to inactivate a gene by inserting foreign DNA via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation (Krysan et al., 1999
Whereas T-DNA mutants may produce loss-of-function phenotypes, comparable studies have utilized a gain-of-function approach through activation tagging (Kardailsky et al., 1999
F. vesca is an excellent candidate to generate a collection of T-DNA or transposon insertion or activation tagged mutants. With its small genome, F. vesca will require a minimal number of independent mutant lines to cover the complete genome. Based on the approximately 200-Mb genome size of F. vesca and assuming random T-DNA integration and an average gene length of 2 kb, we calculate that 255,000 or 391,000 independent T-DNA transformed lines must be produced to mutate any single gene with 95% or 99% probability, respectively (Krysan et al., 1999
Computational analysis of approximately 120,000 ESTs from apple has identified 10 distinct sequences that can be classified as representatives of seven conserved plant microRNA (miRNA) families, and secondary structure predictions reveal that these sequences possess characteristic fold-back structures of precursor miRNAs (Schaffer et al., 2007 Neither identification of a mutant phenotype nor identification of a gene sequence alone will explain the molecular function of a gene. Modern functional genomics relies heavily on high throughput profiling methodologies like gene expression profiling, proteomics, metabolomics, and bioinformatics for detailed gene characterization. Most importantly, readily available transformation systems provide means for validating gene function in vivo.
Apple has the largest collection of ESTs and microarrays and will provide the foundation for rosaceous microarray and gene expression analyses. Several apple microarrays are currently available or under construction and are available on different platforms, including Nimblegen, Invitrogen, and Affymetrix. Pichler et al. (2007)
Proteomics studies in the family are limited to date. A proteomic approach was applied to study flesh browning in stored Conference pears (Pedreschi et al., 2007
Rosaceous plants are extremely rich in specialized metabolites, many of which have documented utility in human health and nutrition. Chemistry and biosynthetic pathways of flavonoids, anthocyanins, and phenolics have been extensively studied in numerous rosaceous fruits with targeted analytical assays. Recent developments in metabolomics allow for global analysis and interrogation of metabolic networks. An untargeted metabolomics approach based on Fourier transform ion cyclotron mass spectrometry was used to study four consecutive stages of strawberry fruit development and identified novel information on the metabolic transition from immature to ripe fruit (Aharoni and O'Connell, 2002
High-throughput profiling platforms and bioinformatics data mining generate numerous biological hypotheses about candidate gene functions that must be tested in subsequent experiments. These follow-up experiments rely upon the availability of a robust transformation protocol. Transformation systems have been developed in many rosaceous crops, including apple, peach, rose, and strawberry. Using degenerate primers designed from conserved regions of transcription factor genes, Ban et al. (2007)
A phylogenetic view provides a refined basis for the inference of homology, orthology, and functional conservation with well-studied plant species. Common markers between maps constructed from intra- and interspecific populations of Prunus allow for comparisons among genomes of seven species, including peach, almond, apricot, cherry, P. cerasifera, P. davidiana, and P. ferganenesis. All comparisons are essentially syntenic and colinear (Arús et al., 2003
Pear maps constructed by Dondini et al. (2004)
A comparison between apple and peach genomes (Fig. 3
) is possible based on 30 common loci (24 random fragment length polymorphisms [RFLPs] and six isozymes) found between the Texas x Earlygold Prunus map and the Prima x Fiesta Malus map (Dirlewanger et al., 2004a
Results of the diploid strawberry map of F. vesca x F. nubicola (Sargent et al., 2006 A comparison between the diploid strawberry and peach genomes based on more than 10 markers per Fragaria linkage group is currently in progress. Results suggest that these two distant genomes still conserve synteny but have undergone reshuffling since their divergence from a common ancestor. Synteny is revealed by considering the eight Prunus linkage groups and noting that five contain most or all markers from only one group of Fragaria and the other three include markers of two groups. Thus, reshuffling must have occurred to a large extent with various fission/fusion, translocation, and inversion events.
The Arabidopsis sequence has been compared with the map positions of: (1) RFLPs mapped in Texas x Earlygold, most of them detected with probes based on Rosaceae or Arabidopsis EST sequences (Dominguez et al., 2003
A novel marker concept based upon "gene pair" polymorphisms provides a promising approach to comparative genomics (Davis et al., 2008
Several important bioinformatics resources have been developed for various rosaceous crops over the last few years. Sequence databases like ESTree db (www.itb.cnr.it/estree/) with EST information for peach (Lazzari et al., 2005 estap), and a candidate gene database (http://www.bioinfo.wsu.edu/gdr/projects/prunus/abbott/PP_LEa/) and transcript map for peach (Horn et al., 2005
"Plant Databases: A Needs Assessment White Paper" (Beavis et al., 2005
The creation in 2003 of the federally funded GDR (www.bioinfo.wsu.edu/gdr) was an important step toward integrating all Rosaceae structural and functional genomics initiatives (Jung et al., 2004 The Rosaceae research community consistently uses GDR as a portal for disseminating and mining data, coordinating collaborations and workgroups, and sharing important news and publications. Usage figures show 218,409 visits and 2,070,880 pages accessed between August 1, 2006 and July 31, 2007. GDR will continue to curate, integrate, and visualize new Rosaceae genomics and genetics data as they become available. These will include genetic maps, markers and traits, phenotype and genotype data, apple physical map, microarray data, and genome sequences from apple, peach, and strawberry.
The Rosaceae Genomics Initiative (RosIGI, http://www.bioinfo.wsu.edu/gdr/community/international/) was established to link and coordinate cross-Rosaceae genomics efforts internationally. These include EST and genome sequencing, genetic and physical mapping, molecular marker discovery, development of a microarray gene expression analysis platform, forward and reverse genetic tools, and high throughput gene validation. In the United States, these efforts are coordinated by the U.S. Rosaceae Genomics, Genetics, and Breeding Executive Committee. Rather than selecting a single model and focusing all resources on developing a full array of resources and tools for it, the Rosaceae community adopted an alternative strategy of developing family-wide resources and leveraging the most appropriate system to maximize efficiency. This strategy has been effective in other plant and microbial research communities (i.e. legume and Phytophthora). A white paper outlining long- and short-term strategies has been prepared by the community and is available at the GDR Web site (www.rosaceaewhitepaper.com).
Genomics efforts in the Rosaceae family represent more than simply another set of organism sequences. The accelerating accumulation of genomics-level information in this particular family brings great advantages. Over the past 5 years, while various "revolutionary" genomics tools have come and gone, a validated set of proven microarray platforms, marker development methods, and high-throughput cloning systems has been established. These proven tools are ripe for application in questions applicable to rosaceous plant biology and crop production. New high-throughput sequencing techniques, means for quantitative gene expression analyses, and novel phenotyping platforms are in their infancy and will mature around economically useful species rather than model systems. The crop species within Rosaceae are well positioned to benefit from these emerging technologies. Being a late arrival to the party has its advantages. The codified Rosaceae community can coalesce around standardized techniques, plant model systems, and computational tools residing in a central database, while strengthening comparative studies and fortifying meaningful meta-analyses. Most importantly, in commitment to the translational genomics paradigm, the Rosaceae genomics community is uniquely poised to incorporate breeders' and growers' input into genomics-level experimental design, bringing greater direct impact to basic science studies while resisting the allure of generating knowledge only for knowledge's sake. With versatile, relevant plant systems, emerging models and a concerted approach, ongoing studies in Rosaceae genomics will contribute to facets of basic plant science while bringing higher-quality products to the consumer with lower environmental impacts. Received January 9, 2008; accepted May 13, 2008; published May 16, 2008.
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Vladimir Shulaev (vshulaev{at}vbi.vt.edu).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.107.115618 * Corresponding author; e-mail vshulaev{at}vbi.vt.edu.
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