Summary: | The leaf, a photosynthetic organ that plays an indispensable role in plant development and growth, has a certain ability to adapt to the environment and exhibits tremendous diversity among angiosperms. <i>Liriodendron chinense</i>, an ancestral angiosperm species, is very popular in landscaping. The leaf of this species has two lobes and resembles a Qing Dynasty Chinese robe; thus, leaf shape is the most valuable ornamental trait of the tree. In this work, to determine the candidate genes associated with leaf development in <i>L. chinense</i>, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was employed to distinguish the developmental stages of tender leaves. Four stages were clearly separated, and transcriptome sequencing was performed for two special leaf stages. Altogether, there were 48.23 G clean reads in the libraries of the two leaf developmental stages, and 48,107 assembled unigenes were annotated with five databases. Among four libraries, 3118 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were enriched in expression profiles. We selected ten DEGs associated with leaf development and validated their expression patterns via quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) assays. Most validation results were closely correlated with the RNA-sequencing data. Taken together, we examined the dynamic process of leaf development and indicated that several transcription factors and phytohormone metabolism genes may participate in leaf shape development. The transcriptome data analysis presented in this work aims to provide basic insights into the mechanisms mediating leaf development, and the results serve as a reference for the genetic breeding of ornamental traits in <i>L. chinense</i>.
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