Abstract

Starch is the most widespread and abundant storage carbohydrate in plants. It is also a major feature of cultivated bananas as it accumulates to large amounts during banana fruit development before almost complete conversion to soluble sugars during ripening. Little is known about the structure of major gene families involved in banana starch metabolism and their evolution compared to other species. To identify genes involved in banana starch metabolism and investigate their evolutionary history, we analyzed six gene families playing a crucial role in plant starch biosynthesis and degradation: the ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylases (AGPases), starch synthases (SS), starch branching enzymes (SBE), debranching enzymes (DBE), α-amylases (AMY) and β-amylases (BAM). Using comparative genomics and phylogenetic approaches, these genes were classified into families and sub-families and orthology relationships with functional genes in Eudicots and in grasses were identified. In addition to known ancestral duplications shaping starch metabolism gene families, independent evolution in banana and grasses also occurred through lineage-specific whole genome duplications for specific sub-families of AGPase, SS, SBE, and BAM genes; and through gene-scale duplications for AMY genes. In particular, banana lineage duplications yielded a set of AGPase, SBE and BAM genes that were highly or specifically expressed in banana fruits. Gene expression analysis highlighted a complex transcriptional reprogramming of starch metabolism genes during ripening of banana fruits. A differential regulation of expression between banana gene duplicates was identified for SBE and BAM genes, suggesting that part of starch metabolism regulation in the fruit evolved in the banana lineage.

Highlights

  • Starch is the main storage carbohydrate in plants, synthesized in both leaves and nonphotosynthetic storage organs of plants

  • Bananas are produced by parthenocarpic, Starch Metabolism Genes of Banana mainly triploid hybrids derived from the species Musa acuminata of the Zingiberales monocotyledon order, sometimes combined with M. balbisiana

  • Seven genes encoding ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylases (AGPases) were identified in the banana genome, a number similar to that in other analyzed species (Supplementary Table S4)

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Summary

Introduction

Starch is the main storage carbohydrate in plants, synthesized in both leaves and nonphotosynthetic storage organs of plants. Major enzymes responsible for starch biosynthesis and degradation are encoded by multigenic families. They are divided in subfamilies that mostly evolved from ancient duplications in the lineages derived from plastid endosymbiosis, with an increasing complexity at the emergence of Chloroplastidae or green lineage. This evolution was accompanied by functional specialization (Ball and Morell, 2003; Deschamps et al, 2008; Cenci et al, 2014; Nougué et al, 2014). Little is known about these genes and their evolution in other monocots with starch-storing organs such as bananas

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