Coffee Tree Gets Its Genome Sequenced

A reference genome for coffee trees has been sequenced for the first time. It improves understanding of the organization of the genome, which is academic, but it also offers new possibilities for selection or improvement of coffee tree varieties. The researchers chose Robusta coffee because of its average sized genome (710 million pairs of DNA bases) and its diploid nature contrary to Coffea arabica, which is tetraploid. The genetic map of the coffee tree studied was produced in the 1980s and also had the advantage of being a homozygous plant (two identical sets of eleven chromosomes), which is easier to analyze than natural heterozygotes.

A reference genome for coffee trees has been sequenced for the first time. It improves understanding of the organization of the genome, which is academic, but it also offers new possibilities for selection or improvement of coffee tree varieties. 

The researchers chose Robusta coffee because of its average sized genome (710 million pairs of DNA bases) and its diploid nature contrary to Coffea arabica, which is tetraploid. The genetic map of the coffee tree studied was produced in the 1980s and also had the advantage of being a homozygous plant (two identical sets of eleven chromosomes), which is easier to analyze than natural heterozygotes.

By using several sequencing technologies, Genoscope coordinated the mapping of the DNA sequence for the coffee tree, assembled in large fragments able to be used in various types of analysis. The Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) and CIRAD teams then anchored these sequence fragments to a high-density genetic card to reconstruct the pseudo-chromosomes.

A catalog of genes and repeated sequences was then created and validated, allowing for a comparison with other plants. Thus, the researchers established a reference genome sequence for coffee trees (including for the species Coffea arabica), and more generally for the Rubiaceae, one of the largest families of flowering plants (containing nearly 12,500 species).

A comparative analysis of genomes by the international consortium also revealed that the organisation of the coffee tree genome is best preserved in the Asteridae (the family to which potatoes and tomatoes belong) and is very close to that of the ancestral species from which all true Dicotyledons (or Eudicotyledons) descended through evolution. Lastly, the study of the genome improves knowledge of the secondary metabolism of plants and its diversification. A comparative analysis with the cacao tree genome also shows that the biosynthesis of caffeine is due to enzymes unique to each species, which appeared at various moments in their evolution.

Over the longer term, the identification of the coffee tree genome sequence opens up new possibilities for varietal improvement, knowledge of the specific functions of the genes (in particular those specific to coffee trees), the possibility of transferring results to other species, and refining diagnostic tools for the function of the plant.

It will facilitate the completion of applied projects, such as the selection or creation of coffee tree varieties with improved technological and/or qualitative characteristics; more resistant to environmental constraints and to bioagressors, such as for example orange leaf rust. In fact, this disease still has a considerable impact on coffee cultivation and the economy of small producer countries in Central America such as Guatemala, Honduras, and Costa Rica. Lastly, it should help guide producers toward ecologically intensive agriculture.

Citation: F. Denoeud et al. The Coffee Genome Provides Insight into Convergent Evolution of Caffeine Biosynthesis, Science,

Source: Institut de Recherche pour le Développement

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