Abstract
Cannabis is an ancient crop representing a rapidly increasing legal market, especially for medicinal purposes. Medicinal and psychoactive effects of Cannabis rely on specific terpenophenolic ligands named cannabinoids. Recent whole-genome sequencing efforts have uncovered variation in multiple genes encoding the final steps in cannabinoid biosynthesis. However, the origin, evolution, and phylogenetic relationships of these cannabinoid oxidocyclase genes remain unclear. To elucidate these aspects, we performed comparative genomic analyses of Cannabis, related genera within the Cannabaceae family, and selected outgroup species. Results show that cannabinoid oxidocyclase genes originated in the Cannabis lineage from within a larger gene expansion in the Cannabaceae family. Localization and divergence of oxidocyclase genes in the Cannabis genome revealed two main syntenic blocks, each comprising tandemly repeated cannabinoid oxidocyclase genes. By comparing these blocks with those in genomes from closely related species, we propose an evolutionary model for the origin, neofunctionalization, duplication, and diversification of cannabinoid oxidocycloase genes. Based on phylogenetic analyses, we propose a comprehensive classification of three main clades and seven subclades that are intended to aid unequivocal referencing and identification of cannabinoid oxidocyclase genes. Our data suggest that cannabinoid phenotype is primarily determined by the presence/absence of single-copy genes. Although wild populations of Cannabis are still unknown, increased sampling of landraces and wild/feral populations across its native geographic range is likely to uncover additional cannabinoid oxidocyclase sequence variants.
Highlights
The plant Cannabis sativa L. ( Cannabis) is an ancient yet controversial crop
This suggests that THCA synthase (THCAS), CBDA synthase (CBDAS), and CBC synthase (CBCAS) originated from a single ancestral cannabinoid oxidocyclase gene within the Cannabis lineage
Based on nucleotide alignments and protein comparisons, we found that all cannabinoid oxidocyclase genes occur in two main syntenic clusters, together with other berberine bridge enzyme (BBE)-like genes
Summary
The plant Cannabis sativa L. ( Cannabis) is an ancient yet controversial crop. Many fundamental aspects about the molecular evolution of Cannabis remain unknown (Kovalchuk et al 2020; Hurgobin et al 2021). We aim to elucidate the origin and evolution of a unique class of biosynthetic genes found in the Cannabis genome
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