The saguaro cactus, a towering, charismatic icon of the Southwest, is one of the most recognized and beloved of all cacti. As a keystone species of the Sonoran Desert, it is also one of the most studied and an integral part of the desert environment.
Despite this, relatively little is known about the saguaro’s evolutionary history. After decades of taxonomic and demographic studies, a group led by researchers from Arizona State University, University of Arizona and Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, is using next-generation sequencing methods to decipher the saguaro cactus (Carnegiea gigantea) genome in hopes of understanding the evolution of its adaptations to life in an extreme environment and its relationship to other large cactus species.
In findings published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, ASU researchers and colleagues from four universities announced they have successfully sequenced the saguaro’s genome, providing a new opportunity to use saguaro as a model species for future ecological, evolutionary and population investigations of cacti.
“The genomic resources generated from our work on saguaro will enable scientists to understand the relationships and origins of novel adaptations in diverse groups of cacti in the future,” said Martin Wojciechowski, a co-author of the paper and professor with Arizona State University’s School of Life Sciences. “Now, we can identify the genetic regulatory and metabolic networks responsible for their unique form and physiology, including stem succulence, the synthesis of the distinct pigments that color flowers and fruits, and their unique form of photosynthesis.”
The saguaro genome is about 1.4 billion base pairs, or approximately half the size of the human genome. However, it’s 10 times the size of the first sequenced plant genome (Arabidopsis). It’s also larger than many commonly cultivated plants such as rice and apple.
In this study, researchers also obtained genomic data from related cactus species — organ pipe, senita and cardón — as well as from a “reference” species to compare their adaptive traits and resolve long-standing challenges to understanding their evolutionary tree.
The research team identified more than 4,400 genes common to all cacti species in the study. This information was then used to help reconstruct an evolutionary history of the species. While the genome sequences from the other cacti were less complete than the saguaro’s, researchers discovered that the saguaro’s closest relative among the cacti sampled is the cardón (Pachycereus pringlei), or “elephant cactus,” the tallest of cacti, found mostly in northwestern Mexico.
But surprisingly, despite the fact that the saguaro is closely related to cardón, many individual saguaro genes are actually more closely related to senita or organ pipe cactus than cardón. This suggests a process of “parallel” or “convergent” evolution at the molecular level. This type of evolution is widespread in all organisms and can obscure evidence about actual relationships between cacti species.
By using genome sequencing, the researchers discovered a pattern of incomplete “lineage sorting” in many genes — a phenomenon called “hemiplasy” that resembles parallel evolution.
“Our comparative analysis of genome sequences from saguaro and the four other cactus species revealed that the history of these species is a complex mosaic of different genes with different genealogies,” said Michael Sanderson, University of Arizona scientist and senior author of this paper.
“A consequence of these diverse gene histories is that the observable traits these cacti exhibit can also be scrambled in unexpected ways in different lineages,” Wojciechowski added. “This leads to the diversity in form and function we see in cacti. This is an example of the common situation where ‘gene trees’ are not congruent with ‘species trees.’”
As a keystone species, the saguaro provides a number of ecosystem resources through beneficial associations with animals and plants, and it provides a source of food for humans. Saguaro is both a representative of the family Cactaceae and is an example of extreme specialization observed in the largest and longest-lived of the columnar forms, which have evolved to become prominent species in the arid ecosystems of both North and South America.
Researchers from the following universities participated in this project: Arizona State University, University of Arizona, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Michigan State University and University of California, Berkeley. Arizona State University, University of Arizona, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Consortium for Drylands Research, and the Tucson Cactus and Succulent Society provided funding for this study.
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