Abstract

Isatis indigotica (2n = 14) is an important medicinal plant in China. Its dried leaves and roots (called Isatidis Folium and Isatidis Radix, respectively) are broadly used in traditional Chinese medicine for curing diseases caused by bacteria and viruses such as influenza and viral pneumonia. Various classes of compounds isolated from this species have been identified as effective ingredients. Previous studies based on transcriptomes revealed only a few candidate genes for the biosynthesis of these active compounds in this medicinal plant. Here, we report a high-quality chromosome-scale genome assembly of I. indigotica with a total size of 293.88 Mb and scaffold N50 = 36.16 Mb using single-molecule real-time long reads and high-throughput chromosome conformation capture techniques. We annotated 30,323 high-confidence protein-coding genes. Based on homolog searching and functional annotations, we identified many candidate genes involved in the biosynthesis of main active components such as indoles, terpenoids, and phenylpropanoids. In addition, we found that some key enzyme-coding gene families related to the biosynthesis of these components were expanded due to tandem duplications, which likely drove the production of these major active compounds and explained why I. indigotica has excellent antibacterial and antiviral activities. Our results highlighted the importance of genome sequencing in identifying candidate genes for metabolite synthesis in medicinal plants.

Highlights

  • Introduction The plant familyBrassicaceae (Cruciferae) comprises over 330 genera and ~3700 species with a worldwide distribution[1,2,3,4,5]

  • The genome size, genome repeat size, and heterozygosity rate of I. indigotica were estimated using K-mer analysis

  • The genome size of I. indigotica was estimated to be ~305 Mb based on flow cytometric analyses using Vigna radiata as the internal standard (Supplementary Fig. S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction The plant familyBrassicaceae (Cruciferae) comprises over 330 genera and ~3700 species with a worldwide distribution[1,2,3,4,5]. Genetic biosynthesis of the major active compounds in medicinal plants of this family remains poorly investigated. Isatis indigotica (2n = 14) belongs to tribe Isatideae in lineage II of the family[3,6,7,8,9,10]. This species is widely cultivated in China as an important medicinal plant because its dried leaves and roots are used as a traditional Chinese medicine for curing diseases and viruses[11,12,13].

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