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Genomic analyses of rice bean landraces reveal adaptation and yield related loci to accelerate breeding.

Authors :
Guan, Jiantao
Zhang, Jintao
Gong, Dan
Zhang, Zhengquan
Yu, Yang
Luo, Gaoling
Somta, Prakit
Hu, Zheng
Wang, Suhua
Yuan, Xingxing
Zhang, Yaowen
Wang, Yanlan
Chen, Yanhua
Laosatit, Kularb
Chen, Xin
Chen, Honglin
Sha, Aihua
Cheng, Xuzhen
Xie, Hua
Wang, Lixia
Source :
Nature Communications; 9/29/2022, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Rice bean (Vigna umbellata) is an underexploited domesticated legume crop consumed for dietary protein in Asia, yet little is known about the genetic diversity of this species. Here, we present a high-quality reference genome for a rice bean landrace (FF25) built using PacBio long-read data and a Hi-C chromatin interaction map, and assess the phylogenetic position and speciation time of rice bean within the Vigna genus. We sequence 440 landraces (two core collections), and GWAS based on data for growth sites at three widely divergent latitudes reveal loci associated with flowering and yield. Loci harboring orthologs of FUL (FRUITFULL), FT (FLOWERING LOCUS T), and PRR3 (PSEUDO-RESPONSE REGULATOR 3) contribute to the adaptation of rice bean from its low latitude center of origin towards higher latitudes, and the landraces which pyramid early-flowering alleles for these loci display maximally short flowering times. We also demonstrate that copy-number-variation for VumCYP78A6 can regulate seed-yield traits. Intriguingly, 32 landraces collected from a mountainous region in South-Central China harbor a recently acquired InDel in TFL1 (TERMINAL FLOWER1) affecting stem determinacy; these materials also have exceptionally high values for multiple human-desired traits and could therefore substantially advance breeding efforts to improve rice bean. Rice bean is an underexploited legume crop that has many desirable properties against bio and abiotic stresses. Here, the authors report the genome assembly of this species, conduct population genetics studies and reveal the genetic variations associated with adaptation and yield traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159412875
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33515-2