Hamon Perla, Grover Corrinne E, Davis Aaron P, Rakotomalala Jean-Jacques, Raharimalala Nathalie E, Albert Victor A, Sreenath Hosahalli L, Stoffelen Piet, Mitchell Sharon E, Couturon Emmanuel, Hamon Serge, de Kochko Alexandre, Crouzillat Dominique, Rigoreau Michel, Sumirat Ucu, Akaffou Sélastique, Guyot Romain
UMR DIADE, IRD, BP 64501, F-34394 Montpellier cedex 5, France.
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017 Apr;109:351-361. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2017.02.009. Epub 2017 Feb 16.
A comprehensive and meaningful phylogenetic hypothesis for the commercially important coffee genus (Coffea) has long been a key objective for coffee researchers. For molecular studies, progress has been limited by low levels of sequence divergence, leading to insufficient topological resolution and statistical support in phylogenetic trees, particularly for the major lineages and for the numerous species occurring in Madagascar. We report here the first almost fully resolved, broadly sampled phylogenetic hypothesis for coffee, the result of combining genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) technology with a newly developed, lab-based workflow to integrate short read next-generation sequencing for low numbers of additional samples. Biogeographic patterns indicate either Africa or Asia (or possibly the Arabian Peninsula) as the most likely ancestral locality for the origin of the coffee genus, with independent radiations across Africa, Asia, and the Western Indian Ocean Islands (including Madagascar and Mauritius). The evolution of caffeine, an important trait for commerce and society, was evaluated in light of our phylogeny. High and consistent caffeine content is found only in species from the equatorial, fully humid environments of West and Central Africa, possibly as an adaptive response to increased levels of pest predation. Moderate caffeine production, however, evolved at least one additional time recently (between 2 and 4Mya) in a Madagascan lineage, which suggests that either the biosynthetic pathway was already in place during the early evolutionary history of coffee, or that caffeine synthesis within the genus is subject to convergent evolution, as is also the case for caffeine synthesis in coffee versus tea and chocolate.
长期以来,为具有商业重要性的咖啡属(Coffea)构建一个全面且有意义的系统发育假说一直是咖啡研究人员的关键目标。对于分子研究而言,进展受到序列差异水平较低的限制,导致系统发育树中的拓扑分辨率和统计支持不足,特别是对于主要谱系以及马达加斯加的众多物种。我们在此报告首个几乎完全解析、广泛取样的咖啡系统发育假说,这是将测序基因分型(GBS)技术与新开发的基于实验室的工作流程相结合的结果,该工作流程整合了少量额外样本的短读长下一代测序。生物地理模式表明非洲或亚洲(或可能是阿拉伯半岛)是咖啡属起源最可能的祖先所在地,在非洲、亚洲和西印度洋岛屿(包括马达加斯加和毛里求斯)有独立的辐射演化。根据我们的系统发育关系评估了咖啡因这一商业和社会重要性状的演化。仅在来自西非和中非赤道完全湿润环境的物种中发现了高且一致的咖啡因含量,这可能是对害虫捕食增加的一种适应性反应。然而,马达加斯加的一个谱系中,中等咖啡因产量最近至少又独立演化了一次(在200万至400万年前之间),这表明要么生物合成途径在咖啡早期进化历史中就已存在,要么该属内的咖啡因合成受到趋同进化影响,咖啡与茶和巧克力中的咖啡因合成情况也是如此。