Abstract
Dendrocalamus sinicus is the world’s largest bamboo species with strong woody culms, and known for its fast-growing culms. As an economic bamboo species, it was popularized for multi-functional applications including furniture, construction, and industrial paper pulp. To comprehensively elucidate the molecular processes involved in its culm elongation, Illumina paired-end sequencing was conducted. About 65.08 million high-quality reads were produced, and assembled into 81,744 unigenes with an average length of 723 bp. A total of 64,338 (79%) unigenes were annotated for their functions, of which, 56,587 were annotated in the NCBI non-redundant protein database and 35,262 were annotated in the Swiss-Prot database. Also, 42,508 and 21,009 annotated unigenes were allocated to gene ontology (GO) categories and clusters of orthologous groups (COG), respectively. By searching against the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes Pathway database (KEGG), 33,920 unigenes were assigned to 128 KEGG pathways. Meanwhile, 8,553 simple sequence repeats (SSRs) and 81,534 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) were identified, respectively. Additionally, 388 transcripts encoding lignin biosynthesis were detected, among which, 27 transcripts encoding Shikimate O-hydroxycinnamoyltransferase (HCT) specifically expressed in D. sinicus when compared to other bamboo species and rice. The phylogenetic relationship between D. sinicus and other plants was analyzed, suggesting functional diversity of HCT unigenes in D. sinicus. We conjectured that HCT might lead to the high lignin content and giant culm. Given that the leaves are not yet formed and culm is covered with sheaths during culm elongation, the existence of photosynthesis of bamboo culm is usually neglected. Surprisedly, 109 transcripts encoding photosynthesis were identified, including photosystem I and II, cytochrome b6/f complex, photosynthetic electron transport and F-type ATPase, and 24 transcripts were characterized as antenna proteins that regarded as the main tool for capturing light of plants, implying stem photosynthesis plays a key role during culm elongation due to the unavailability of its leaf. By real-time quantitative PCR, the expression level of 6 unigenes was detected. The results showed the expression level of all genes accorded with the transcriptome data, which confirm the reliability of the transcriptome data. As we know, this is the first study underline the D. sinicus transcriptome, which will deepen the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of culm development. The results may help variety improvement and resource utilization of bamboos.
Highlights
Due to depleting fossil reserves and increasing emission of greenhouse gases, it is obvious that utilization of renewable feedstock is one necessary step towards a sustainable development of our future [1]
A total of 65.08 million raw reads and 4.59 gigabase pairs (Gbp) with an average GC content of 53.21% were obtained by a stringent quality check
By the Trinity de novo assembly program, short-read sequences were assembled into 81,744 unigenes with a mean length of 723 bp, of which, 63,130 unigenes (77.23%) with length 200–1000 bp, 14,161 unigenes (17.32%) with length 1000–2000 bp, and 4453 unigenes (5.45%) with length > 2000 bp (Table 1)
Summary
Due to depleting fossil reserves and increasing emission of greenhouse gases, it is obvious that utilization of renewable feedstock is one necessary step towards a sustainable development of our future [1]. Dendrocalamus sinicus, belonging to Bambusoideae of Gramineae, is the world’s largest bamboo species with strong woody stems (maximal diameter 30 cm and maximal height 33 m), which is mainly distributed in the southwest region of China [5]. It is called Da bamboo by local residents, and its culms yield per unit area is 5–8 times as that of Phyllostachys pubscens that is popularized as a major economic bamboo species in China [6]. Fast growth, and high productivity, it is considered as one of the most potential renewable nonwoody lignocellulosic feedstocks for bioenergy and biorefinery [8]
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