Abstract

Lineage-specific gene duplications contribute to a large variation in specialized metabolites among different plant species. There is also considerable variability in the specialized metabolites within a single plant species. However, it is unclear whether copy number variations (CNVs) derived from gene duplication events contribute to the diversity of specialized metabolites within species. We identified metabolome quantitative trait genes (mQTGs) associated with quantitative metabolite variations and examined the relationship between mQTGs and CNVs. We obtained 1,335 specialized metabolite signals from 53 worldwide A. thaliana accessions using liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. In this study, genes associated with specialized metabolites were inferred by either a generally authorized genome-wide association study (GWAS) approach or a novel analysis of the association between gene expression and metabolite accumulation. Genes qualified by both analyses are defined to be mQTGs. The integrated method enabled us to detect mQTGs with a low false positive rate (=5.71 × 10-4). We also identified 5,654 genes associated with 1,335 specialized metabolites. Of these genes, 4.4% were affected by CNVs, which was more than expected (χ2 test: P < 0.01). This result suggests that CNVs contribute to variations in specialized metabolites within a species. To assess the contribution of CNVs to adaptive evolution in A. thaliana, we examined the selective sweeps around the mQTGs. We observed that the mQTGs with CNVs tended to undergo selective sweeps. These observations imply that variations in specialized metabolites caused by CNVs contribute to the adaptive evolution of A. thaliana.

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