Litcius/Paper detail

The genome of jojoba ( <i>Simmondsia chinensis</i> ): A taxonomically isolated species that directs wax ester accumulation in its seeds

Drew Sturtevant, Shaoping Lu, Zhi-Wei Zhou, Yin Shen, Shuo Wang, Jia‐Ming Song, Jinshun Zhong, David Burks, Zhi-Quan Yang, Qingyong Yang, Ashley E. Cannon, Cornelia Herrfurth, Ivo Feußner, Ljudmilla Borisjuk, E. Muñz, Guido F. Verbeck, Xuexia Wang, Rajeev K. Azad, Brenda Singleton, John M. Dyer, Ling‐Ling Chen, Kent D. Chapman, Liang Guo

2020Science Advances84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

), are an abundant, renewable source of liquid wax esters, which are valued additives in cosmetic products and industrial lubricants. Jojoba is relegated to its own taxonomic family, and there is little genetic information available to elucidate its phylogeny. Here, we report the high-quality, 887-Mb genome of jojoba assembled into 26 chromosomes with 23,490 protein-coding genes. The jojoba genome has only the whole-genome triplication (γ) shared among eudicots and no recent duplications. These genomic resources coupled with extensive transcriptome, proteome, and lipidome data helped to define heterogeneous pathways and machinery for lipid synthesis and storage, provided missing evolutionary history information for this taxonomically segregated dioecious plant species, and will support efforts to improve the agronomic properties of jojoba.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGenomeProteomeBotanyWaxTranscriptomeSequence assemblyGeneGeneticsGene expressionBiochemistryPlant biochemistry and biosynthesisLubricants and Their AdditivesLipid metabolism and biosynthesis