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Featured researches published by Dianchuan Jin.


Nature | 2012

Repeated polyploidization of Gossypium genomes and the evolution of spinnable cotton fibres

Andrew H. Paterson; Jonathan F. Wendel; Heidrun Gundlach; Hui Guo; Jerry Jenkins; Dianchuan Jin; Danny J. Llewellyn; Kurtis C. Showmaker; Shengqiang Shu; Mi-jeong Yoo; Robert L. Byers; Wei Chen; Adi Doron-Faigenboim; Mary V. Duke; Lei Gong; Jane Grimwood; Corrinne E. Grover; Kara Grupp; Guanjing Hu; Tae-Ho Lee; Jingping Li; Lifeng Lin; Tao Liu; Barry S. Marler; Justin T. Page; Alison W. Roberts; Elisson Romanel; William S. Sanders; Emmanuel Szadkowski; Xu Tan

Polyploidy often confers emergent properties, such as the higher fibre productivity and quality of tetraploid cottons than diploid cottons bred for the same environments. Here we show that an abrupt five- to sixfold ploidy increase approximately 60 million years (Myr) ago, and allopolyploidy reuniting divergent Gossypium genomes approximately 1–2 Myr ago, conferred about 30–36-fold duplication of ancestral angiosperm (flowering plant) genes in elite cottons (Gossypium hirsutum and Gossypium barbadense), genetic complexity equalled only by Brassica among sequenced angiosperms. Nascent fibre evolution, before allopolyploidy, is elucidated by comparison of spinnable-fibred Gossypium herbaceum A and non-spinnable Gossypium longicalyx F genomes to one another and the outgroup D genome of non-spinnable Gossypium raimondii. The sequence of a G. hirsutum AtDt (in which ‘t’ indicates tetraploid) cultivar reveals many non-reciprocal DNA exchanges between subgenomes that may have contributed to phenotypic innovation and/or other emergent properties such as ecological adaptation by polyploids. Most DNA-level novelty in G. hirsutum recombines alleles from the D-genome progenitor native to its New World habitat and the Old World A-genome progenitor in which spinnable fibre evolved. Coordinated expression changes in proximal groups of functionally distinct genes, including a nuclear mitochondrial DNA block, may account for clusters of cotton-fibre quantitative trait loci affecting diverse traits. Opportunities abound for dissecting emergent properties of other polyploids, particularly angiosperms, by comparison to diploid progenitors and outgroups.


Nature Communications | 2014

The Brassica oleracea genome reveals the asymmetrical evolution of polyploid genomes

Shengyi Liu; Xinhua Yang; Chaobo Tong; David Edwards; Isobel A. P. Parkin; Meixia Zhao; Jianxin Ma; Jingyin Yu; Shunmou Huang; Xiyin Wang; Wang J; Kun Lu; Zhiyuan Fang; Ian Bancroft; Tae-Jin Yang; Qiong Hu; Xinfa Wang; Zhen Yue; Haojie Li; Linfeng Yang; Jian Wu; Qing Zhou; Wanxin Wang; Graham J. King; J. Chris Pires; Changxin Lu; Zhangyan Wu; Perumal Sampath; Zhuo Wang; Hui Guo

Polyploidization has provided much genetic variation for plant adaptive evolution, but the mechanisms by which the molecular evolution of polyploid genomes establishes genetic architecture underlying species differentiation are unclear. Brassica is an ideal model to increase knowledge of polyploid evolution. Here we describe a draft genome sequence of Brassica oleracea, comparing it with that of its sister species B. rapa to reveal numerous chromosome rearrangements and asymmetrical gene loss in duplicated genomic blocks, asymmetrical amplification of transposable elements, differential gene co-retention for specific pathways and variation in gene expression, including alternative splicing, among a large number of paralogous and orthologous genes. Genes related to the production of anticancer phytochemicals and morphological variations illustrate consequences of genome duplication and gene divergence, imparting biochemical and morphological variation to B. oleracea. This study provides insights into Brassica genome evolution and will underpin research into the many important crops in this genus.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2014

PseKNC: a flexible web server for generating pseudo K-tuple nucleotide composition.

Wei Chen; Tianyu Lei; Dianchuan Jin; Hao Lin; Kuo-Chen Chou

The pseudo oligonucleotide composition, or pseudo K-tuple nucleotide composition (PseKNC), can be used to represent a DNA or RNA sequence with a discrete model or vector yet still keep considerable sequence order information, particularly the global or long-range sequence order information, via the physicochemical properties of its constituent oligonucleotides. Therefore, the PseKNC approach may hold very high potential for enhancing the power in dealing with many problems in computational genomics and genome sequence analysis. However, dealing with different DNA or RNA problems may need different kinds of PseKNC. Here, we present a flexible and user-friendly web server for PseKNC (at http://lin.uestc.edu.cn/pseknc/default.aspx) by which users can easily generate many different modes of PseKNC according to their need by selecting various parameters and physicochemical properties. Furthermore, for the convenience of the vast majority of experimental scientists, a step-by-step guide is provided on how to use the current web server to generate their desired PseKNC without the need to follow the complicated mathematical equations, which are presented in this article just for the integrity of PseKNC formulation and its development. It is anticipated that the PseKNC web server will become a very useful tool in computational genomics and genome sequence analysis.


Molecular Plant | 2015

Genome Alignment Spanning Major Poaceae Lineages Reveals Heterogeneous Evolutionary Rates and Alters Inferred Dates for Key Evolutionary Events

Xiyin Wang; Jinpeng Wang; Dianchuan Jin; Hui Guo; Tae-Ho Lee; Tao Liu; Andrew H. Paterson

Multiple comparisons among genomes can clarify their evolution, speciation, and functional innovations. To date, the genome sequences of eight grasses representing the most economically important Poaceae (grass) clades have been published, and their genomic-level comparison is an essential foundation for evolutionary, functional, and translational research. Using a formal and conservative approach, we aligned these genomes. Direct comparison of paralogous gene pairs all duplicated simultaneously reveal striking variation in evolutionary rates among whole genomes, with nucleotide substitution slowest in rice and up to 48% faster in other grasses, adding a new dimension to the value of rice as a grass model. We reconstructed ancestral genome contents for major evolutionary nodes, potentially contributing to understanding the divergence and speciation of grasses. Recent fossil evidence suggests revisions of the estimated dates of key evolutionary events, implying that the pan-grass polyploidization occurred ∼96 million years ago and could not be related to the Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction as previously inferred. Adjusted dating to reflect both updated fossil evidence and lineage-specific evolutionary rates suggested that maize subgenome divergence and maize-sorghum divergence were virtually simultaneous, a coincidence that would be explained if polyploidization directly contributed to speciation. This work lays a solid foundation for Poaceae translational genomics.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Hierarchically Aligning 10 Legume Genomes Establishes a Family-Level Genomics Platform

Jinpeng Wang; Pengchuan Sun; Yuxian Li; Yinzhe Liu; Jigao Yu; Xuelian Ma; Sangrong Sun; Nanshan Yang; Ruiyan Xia; Tianyu Lei; Xiaojian Liu; Beibei Jiao; Yue Xing; Weina Ge; Li Wang; Zhenyi Wang; Xiaoming Song; Min Yuan; Di Guo; Lan Zhang; Jiaqi Zhang; Dianchuan Jin; Wei Chen; Yuxin Pan; Tao Liu; Ling Jin; Jinshuai Sun; Jiaxiang Yu; Rui Cheng; Xueqian Duan

A hierarchical and event-related alignment laid a solid foundation for further genomics exploration in the legume research community and beyond. Mainly due to their economic importance, genomes of 10 legumes, including soybean (Glycine max), wild peanut (Arachis duranensis and Arachis ipaensis), and barrel medic (Medicago truncatula), have been sequenced. However, a family-level comparative genomics analysis has been unavailable. With grape (Vitis vinifera) and selected legume genomes as outgroups, we managed to perform a hierarchical and event-related alignment of these genomes and deconvoluted layers of homologous regions produced by ancestral polyploidizations or speciations. Consequently, we illustrated genomic fractionation characterized by widespread gene losses after the polyploidizations. Notably, high similarity in gene retention between recently duplicated chromosomes in soybean supported the likely autopolyploidy nature of its tetraploid ancestor. Moreover, although most gene losses were nearly random, largely but not fully described by geometric distribution, we showed that polyploidization contributed divergently to the copy number variation of important gene families. Besides, we showed significantly divergent evolutionary levels among legumes and, by performing synonymous nucleotide substitutions at synonymous sites correction, redated major evolutionary events during their expansion. This effort laid a solid foundation for further genomics exploration in the legume research community and beyond. We describe only a tiny fraction of legume comparative genomics analysis that we performed; more information was stored in the newly constructed Legume Comparative Genomics Research Platform (www.legumegrp.org).


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2018

An Overlooked Paleotetraploidization in Cucurbitaceae

Jinpeng Wang; Pengchuan Sun; Yuxian Li; Yinzhe Liu; Nanshan Yang; Jigao Yu; Xuelian Ma; Sangrong Sun; Ruiyan Xia; Xiaojian Liu; Dongcen Ge; Sainan Luo; Yinmeng Liu; Youting Kong; Xiaobo Cui; Tianyu Lei; Li Wang; Zhenyi Wang; Weina Ge; Lan Zhang; Xiaoming Song; Min Yuan; Di Guo; Dianchuan Jin; Wei Chen; Yuxin Pan; Tao Liu; Guixian Yang; Yue Xiao; Jinshuai Sun

Abstract Cucurbitaceae plants are of considerable biological and economic importance, and genomes of cucumber, watermelon, and melon have been sequenced. However, a comparative genomics exploration of their genome structures and evolution has not been available. Here, we aimed at performing a hierarchical inference of genomic homology resulted from recursive paleopolyploidizations. Unexpectedly, we found that, shortly after a core-eudicot-common hexaploidy, a cucurbit-common tetraploidization (CCT) occurred, overlooked by previous reports. Moreover, we characterized gene loss (and retention) after these respective events, which were significantly unbalanced between inferred subgenomes, and between plants after their split. The inference of a dominant subgenome and a sensitive one suggested an allotetraploid nature of the CCT. Besides, we found divergent evolutionary rates among cucurbits, and after doing rate correction, we dated the CCT to be 90–102 Ma, likely common to all Cucurbitaceae plants, showing its important role in the establishment of the plant family.


Archive | 2015

Comparative Analysis of Gene Conversion Between Duplicated Regions in Brassica rapa and B. oleracea Genomes

Jinpeng Wang; Hui Guo; Dianchuan Jin; Xiyin Wang; Andrew H. Paterson

Plant genomes contain many duplicated genes, some of which were produced by recursive polyploidizations. These duplicated genes may evolve interactively and even concertedly through homoeologous recombination. Here, we explored likely gene conversion in Brassica rapa and Brassica oleracea. By checking gene colinearity, we detected 4296 duplicated genes existing in both the species, which were produced by whole-genome triplication from their common ancestor. Incongruities of homologous gene tree topologies indicated that 8 % of these duplicated genes were converted by one another after the divergence of B. rapa and B. oleracea. These converted genes are more often from larger duplicated chromosomal blocks, indicating that illegitimate recombination is more likely to occur between larger homoeologous chromosomal regions. This research contributed to understanding genome stability and gene evolution after polyploidization.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2016

Comparative Genomics Analysis of Rice and Pineapple Contributes to Understand the Chromosome Number Reduction and Genomic Changes in Grasses

Jinpeng Wang; Jiaxiang Yu; Pengchuan Sun; Yuxian Li; Ruiyan Xia; Yinzhe Liu; Xuelian Ma; Jigao Yu; Nanshan Yang; Tianyu Lei; Zhenyi Wang; Li Wang; Weina Ge; Xiaoming Song; Xiaojian Liu; Sangrong Sun; Tao Liu; Dianchuan Jin; Yuxin Pan; Xiyin Wang

Rice is one of the most researched model plant, and has a genome structure most resembling that of the grass common ancestor after a grass common tetraploidization ∼100 million years ago. There has been a standing controversy whether there had been five or seven basic chromosomes, before the tetraploidization, which were tackled but could not be well solved for the lacking of a sequenced and assembled outgroup plant to have a conservative genome structure. Recently, the availability of pineapple genome, which has not been subjected to the grass-common tetraploidization, provides a precious opportunity to solve the above controversy and to research into genome changes of rice and other grasses. Here, we performed a comparative genomics analysis of pineapple and rice, and found solid evidence that grass-common ancestor had 2n = 2x = 14 basic chromosomes before the tetraploidization and duplicated to 2n = 4x = 28 after the event. Moreover, we proposed that enormous gene missing from duplicated regions in rice should be explained by an allotetraploid produced by prominently divergent parental lines, rather than gene losses after their divergence. This means that genome fractionation might have occurred before the formation of the allotetraploid grass ancestor.


international conference on information computing and applications | 2011

The Evolution Analysis of Resistance Genes in Sorghum

Ling Jin; Li Wang; Yakun Wang; Shuai Zhang; Dianchuan Jin

Plant disease resistance genes are products of long-term interaction between plants and pathogens, and they played an important role in the process of resisting the pathogens. It has great significance for screening the plant new-functional disease resistance genes and improving the efficiency of breeding for disease resistance by understanding the evolution of plant disease resistance genes. In this paper, we clarify the evolutionary mechanisms of resistance genes in sorghum by bioinformatics analysis.


international conference on information computing and applications | 2011

Evolutionary Analysis of Cellulose Gene Family in Grasses

Yakun Wang; Li Wang; Ling Jin; Jinpeng Wang; Dianchuan Jin

Cellulose is the main component of the plant cell walls, and it is the polysaccharide that is the most widely distributed and abundanted in nature. So far, some cellulase genes have been sequenced. In this article, I build cellulose gene family in four grasses through genetic similarity, then I do phylogenetic analysis from the aspects of the GC content, phylogenetic trees, nucleotide substitution rates and so on in order to further clarify the evolution of cellulose gene family in grasses. Research shows that grass cellulose gene family has the high GC content (about 81.3%), and that is mainly affected by the negative selection.

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Jinpeng Wang

North China University of Science and Technology

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Li Wang

North China University of Science and Technology

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Tao Liu

North China University of Science and Technology

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Tianyu Lei

North China University of Science and Technology

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Zhenyi Wang

North China University of Science and Technology

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Wei Chen

North China University of Science and Technology

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Yuxian Li

North China University of Science and Technology

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Jigao Yu

North China University of Science and Technology

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Lan Zhang

North China University of Science and Technology

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