Transcriptomic Analysis of the Regulation of Rhizome Formation in Temperate and Tropical Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera)
Mei Yang, Lingping Zhu, Cheng Pan, Liming Xu, Yanling Liu, Weidong Ke, Pingfang Yang

TL;DR
This study uses transcriptomic analysis to explore how rhizome girth enlargement is regulated in temperate and tropical lotus plants.
Contribution
The study identifies candidate genes and pathways involved in rhizome girth enlargement in lotus cultivars.
Findings
Transcriptomic analysis revealed 8821 differentially expressed genes between temperate and tropical lotus cultivars.
Candidate genes related to photoperiod, starch metabolism, and hormone signaling were identified for rhizome girth enlargement.
Functional analysis showed significant enrichment in carbohydrate metabolism and plant hormone signal transduction pathways.
Abstract
Rhizome is the storage organ of lotus derived from modified stems. The development of rhizome is a complex process and depends on the balanced expression of the genes that is controlled by environmental and endogenous factors. However, little is known about the mechanism that regulates rhizome girth enlargement. In this study, using RNA-seq, transcriptomic analyses were performed at three rhizome developmental stages—the stolon, middle swelling and later swelling stage —in the cultivars ‘ZO’ (temperate lotus with enlarged rhizome) and ‘RL’ (tropical lotus with stolon). About 348 million high-quality reads were generated, and 88.5% of the data were mapped to the reference genome. Of 26783 genes identified, 24069 genes were previously predicted in the reference, and 2714 genes were novel transcripts. Moreover, 8821 genes were differentially expressed between the cultivars at the three…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalician and Iberian cultural studies · Medieval Iberian Studies
