How Anthurium got its color, wax, and floral form
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How Anthurium got its color, wax, and floral form

16/04/2026 TranSpread

Anthurium is among the most economically important tropical ornamentals, second only to orchids in the floriculture trade, yet its floral biology has remained difficult to dissect because genomic resources have been limited. Its commercial value depends heavily on traits such as spathe color, spadix form, and floral longevity, but the regulatory mechanisms behind these features have not been fully resolved. Previous work suggested roles for anthocyanins, cuticular wax, and MADS-box genes, but no integrated framework connected these processes across evolution, development, and metabolism. Based on these challenges, an in-depth investigation of the genetic and biochemical foundations of Anthurium floral traits was needed.

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hainan University, Shanxi Agricultural University, Colorado State University, and collaborating institutions reported the study (DOI: 10.1093/hr/uhaf316) on November 8, 2025, in Horticulture Research. Focusing on two iconic species, Anthurium andraeanum and Anthurium scherzerianum, the team used integrative multi-omics to uncover how genome evolution, pigment metabolism, and wax biosynthesis together shape some of the plant’s most important ornamental traits.

The researchers first assembled chromosome-level genomes for A. andraeanum and A. scherzerianum, revealing large genomes, extensive chromosomal rearrangements, and transposon expansion. They also found evidence of two whole-genome duplication events and showed that 179 accessions clustered into two major genetic groups that did not fully match traditional horticultural classifications, suggesting that breeding categories only partly reflect biological relationships.

The study then turned to floral traits. For inflorescence development, the team built time-ordered gene co-expression networks and found dynamic transcription factor activity across six stages of spadix development. Comparative analysis across Araceae linked floral diversification to changes involving SOC1 and AGL6. For spathe color, transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses showed that anthocyanin accumulation rose steadily during development and peaked with full coloration, while 33 enzyme genes were mapped to flavonoid and anthocyanin biosynthesis. Key pathways involved CHI, F3H, ANS, 4CL, CHS, and DFR, and color variation across cultivars reflected coordinated metabolite ratios rather than any single pigment alone. Finally, wax analyses in contrasting cultivars connected heavier wax deposition with longer vase life and identified CER3, KCS1, and KCS3 as important regulators of wax biosynthesis.

The study shows that the beauty of Anthurium is not controlled by one pathway, but by an interconnected system spanning genome evolution, developmental regulation, and metabolite balance. Its greatest strength is the way it ties visible floral traits to specific molecular candidates, creating a bridge between basic evolutionary biology and applied ornamental breeding. At the same time, the authors note that several candidate genes still require direct functional validation, making this work both a landmark resource and a starting point for deeper mechanistic studies.

The findings could directly support the breeding of Anthurium cultivars with more stable color, improved floral form, and longer postharvest performance. Candidate genes linked to pigment synthesis and wax deposition provide promising targets for marker-assisted selection and future functional improvement. More broadly, the study offers a model for how multi-omics can accelerate the dissection of complex ornamental traits in non-model plants. By clarifying how genome restructuring, metabolite networks, and developmental regulators interact, the work may also help researchers better understand speciation and trait diversification across Araceae and other ornamental crops.

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References

DOI

10.1093/hr/uhaf316

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhaf316

Funding information

This project was supported by the Project of National Key Laboratory for Tropical Crop Breeding (NKLTCB-ZX04), the Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund (1630032023014; 1630032024024), the Hainan Major Science and Technology Program (ZDKJ2021015), the Scientific Research Foundation for Principle Investigator, Kunpeng Institute of Modern Agriculture at Foshan (KIMA-QD2022004), the Funding of Major Scientific Research Tasks, Kunpeng Institute of Modern Agriculture at Foshan (KIMA-ZDKY2022004), the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Elite Youth Program (grant 110243160001007), the Taizhou Seed Industry Research and Development Project (2024-06), and Hainan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (325RC822).

About Horticulture Research

Horticulture Research is an open access journal of Nanjing Agricultural University and ranked number one in the Horticulture category of the Journal Citation Reports ™ from Clarivate, 2023. The journal is committed to publishing original research articles, reviews, perspectives, comments, correspondence articles and letters to the editor related to all major horticultural plants and disciplines, including biotechnology, breeding, cellular and molecular biology, evolution, genetics, inter-species interactions, physiology, and the origination and domestication of crops.

Paper title: Integrative multi-omics analysis reveals the genetic architecture of floral traits in Anthurium
Attached files
  • Comparative genomic analysis.
16/04/2026 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Science, Agriculture & fishing

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