Abstract
AbstractVictoria cruzianais well known for its huge floating leaves covered with sharp spines and its night blooming. Reports indicate that white flowers open during the first night and turn pinkish during the following day and the second night. Here, we set out to unravel the molecular basis and ecological function of the flower color change inV. cruziana. A high quality genome sequence with a N50 of 14.3 Mbp and a total assembly size of 3.54 Gbp was generated as the genetic basis for this study. Comparative transcriptomics revealed the genes required for anthocyanin biosynthesis genes and their transcriptional regulators as differentially expressed between the white and the pinkish stage of a flower. Structural genes with expression differences between white and pinkish flower stages includeVcrF3’H, VcrF3’5’H, VcrDFR, VcrANS, andVcrarGST. The expression pattern of the corresponding transcription factorsVcrMYBSG5, VcrMYBSG6, VcrTT8, andVcrTTG1also showed differences that aligned with the flower color.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory