作者
France Denœud,Lorenzo Carretero‐Paulet,Alexis Dereeper,Gaëtan Droc,Romain Guyot,Marco Pietrella,Chunfang Zheng,Adriana Alberti,François Anthony,Giuseppe Aprea,Jean‐Marc Aury,Pascal Bento,Maria Bernard,Stéphanie Bocs,Claudine Campa,Alberto Cenci,Marie‐Christine Combes,Dominique Crouzillat,Corinne Da Silva,Loretta Daddiego,Fabien De Bellis,Stéphane Dussert,Olivier Garsmeur,Thomas Gayraud,Valentin Guignon,Katharina Jahn,Véronique Jamilloux,Thierry Joët,Karine Labadie,Tianying Lan,Julie Leclercq,Maud Lepelley,Thierry Leroy,Leiting Li,Pablo Librado,Loredana Lopez,Adriana Muñoz,Benjamin Noël,Alberto Pallavicini,Gaetano Perrotta,Valérie Poncet,David Pot,Priyono Priyono,Michel Rigoreau,Mathieu Rouard,Julio Rozas,Christine Tranchant‐Dubreuil,Robert VanBuren,Qiong Zhang,Alan Carvalho Andrade,Xavier Argout,Benoît Bertrand,Alexandre de Kochko,G. Graziosi,Robert J. Henry,Jayarama,Ray Ming,Chifumi Nagai,Steve Rounsley,David Sankoff,Giovanni Giuliano,Victor A. Albert,Patrick Wincker,Philippe Lebailly
摘要
Coffee, tea, and chocolate converge Caffeine has evolved multiple times among plant species, but no one knows whether these events involved similar genes. Denoeud et al. sequenced the Coffea canephora (coffee) genome and identified a conserved gene order (see the Perspective by Zamir). Although this species underwent fewer genome duplications than related species, the relevant caffeine genes experienced tandem duplications that expanded their numbers within this species. Scientists have seen similar but independent expansions in distantly related species of tea and cacao, suggesting that caffeine might have played an adaptive role in coffee evolution. Science , this issue p. 1181 ; see also p. 1124