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Harnessing landrace diversity empowers wheat breeding.

Authors :
Cheng S
Feng C
Wingen LU
Cheng H
Riche AB
Jiang M
Leverington-Waite M
Huang Z
Collier S
Orford S
Wang X
Awal R
Barker G
O'Hara T
Lister C
Siluveru A
Quiroz-Chávez J
Ramírez-González RH
Bryant R
Berry S
Bansal U
Bariana HS
Bennett MJ
Bicego B
Bilham L
Brown JKM
Burridge A
Burt C
Buurman M
Castle M
Chartrain L
Chen B
Denbel W
Elkot AF
Fenwick P
Feuerhelm D
Foulkes J
Gaju O
Gauley A
Gaurav K
Hafeez AN
Han R
Horler R
Hou J
Iqbal MS
Kerton M
Kondic-Spica A
Kowalski A
Lage J
Li X
Liu H
Liu S
Lovegrove A
Ma L
Mumford C
Parmar S
Philp C
Playford D
Przewieslik-Allen AM
Sarfraz Z
Schafer D
Shewry PR
Shi Y
Slafer GA
Song B
Song B
Steele D
Steuernagel B
Tailby P
Tyrrell S
Waheed A
Wamalwa MN
Wang X
Wei Y
Winfield M
Wu S
Wu Y
Wulff BBH
Xian W
Xu Y
Xu Y
Yuan Q
Zhang X
Edwards KJ
Dixon L
Nicholson P
Chayut N
Hawkesford MJ
Uauy C
Sanders D
Huang S
Griffiths S
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2024 Aug; Vol. 632 (8026), pp. 823-831. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 17.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Harnessing genetic diversity in major staple crops through the development of new breeding capabilities is essential to ensure food security <superscript>1</superscript> . Here we examined the genetic and phenotypic diversity of the A. E. Watkins landrace collection <superscript>2</superscript> of bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), a major global cereal, by whole-genome re-sequencing of 827 Watkins landraces and 208 modern cultivars and in-depth field evaluation spanning a decade. We found that modern cultivars are derived from two of the seven ancestral groups of wheat and maintain very long-range haplotype integrity. The remaining five groups represent untapped genetic sources, providing access to landrace-specific alleles and haplotypes for breeding. Linkage disequilibrium-based haplotypes and association genetics analyses link Watkins genomes to the thousands of identified high-resolution quantitative trait loci and significant marker-trait associations. Using these structured germplasm, genotyping and informatics resources, we revealed many Watkins-unique beneficial haplotypes that can confer superior traits in modern wheat. Furthermore, we assessed the phenotypic effects of 44,338 Watkins-unique haplotypes, introgressed from 143 prioritized quantitative trait loci in the context of modern cultivars, bridging the gap between landrace diversity and current breeding. This study establishes a framework for systematically utilizing genetic diversity in crop improvement to achieve sustainable food security.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
632
Issue :
8026
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38885696
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07682-9