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The barley pan-genome reveals the hidden legacy of mutation breeding

Authors :
Jayakodi, M
Padmarasu, S
Haberer, G
Bonthala, VS
Gundlach, H
Monat, C
Lux, T
Kamal, N
Lang, D
Himmelbach, A
Ens, J
Zhang, X-Q
Angessa, TT
Zhou, G
Tan, C
Hill, C
Wang, P
Schreiber, M
Boston, LB
Plott, C
Jenkins, J
Guo, Y
Fiebig, A
Budak, H
Xu, D
Zhang, J
Wang, C
Grimwood, J
Schmutz, J
Guo, G
Zhang, G
Mochida, K
Hirayama, T
Sato, K
Chalmers, KJ
Langridge, P
Waugh, R
Pozniak, CJ
Scholz, U
Mayer, KFX
Spannagl, M
Li, C
Mascher, M
Stein, N
Jayakodi, M
Padmarasu, S
Haberer, G
Bonthala, VS
Gundlach, H
Monat, C
Lux, T
Kamal, N
Lang, D
Himmelbach, A
Ens, J
Zhang, X-Q
Angessa, TT
Zhou, G
Tan, C
Hill, C
Wang, P
Schreiber, M
Boston, LB
Plott, C
Jenkins, J
Guo, Y
Fiebig, A
Budak, H
Xu, D
Zhang, J
Wang, C
Grimwood, J
Schmutz, J
Guo, G
Zhang, G
Mochida, K
Hirayama, T
Sato, K
Chalmers, KJ
Langridge, P
Waugh, R
Pozniak, CJ
Scholz, U
Mayer, KFX
Spannagl, M
Li, C
Mascher, M
Stein, N
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Genetic diversity is key to crop improvement. Owing to pervasive genomic structural variation, a single reference genome assembly cannot capture the full complement of sequence diversity of a crop species (known as the 'pan-genome'1). Multiple high-quality sequence assemblies are an indispensable component of a pan-genome infrastructure. Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is an important cereal crop with a long history of cultivation that is adapted to a wide range of agro-climatic conditions2. Here we report the construction of chromosome-scale sequence assemblies for the genotypes of 20 varieties of barley-comprising landraces, cultivars and a wild barley-that were selected as representatives of global barley diversity. We catalogued genomic presence/absence variants and explored the use of structural variants for quantitative genetic analysis through whole-genome shotgun sequencing of 300 gene bank accessions. We discovered abundant large inversion polymorphisms and analysed in detail two inversions that are frequently found in current elite barley germplasm; one is probably the product of mutation breeding and the other is tightly linked to a locus that is involved in the expansion of geographical range. This first-generation barley pan-genome makes previously hidden genetic variation accessible to genetic studies and breeding.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315701555
Document Type :
Electronic Resource