sábado, 13 de abril de 2019
Durum wheat genome highlights past domestication signatures and future improvement targets
Maccaferri et al., 2019
The domestication of wild emmer wheat led to the selection of modern
durum wheat, grown mainly for pasta production. We describe the
10.45 gigabase (Gb) assembly of the genome of durum wheat cultivar
Svevo. The assembly enabled genome-wide genetic diversity analyses
revealing the changes imposed by thousands of years of empirical
selection and breeding. Regions exhibiting strong signatures of genetic
divergence associated with domestication and breeding were widespread in
the genome with several major diversity losses in the pericentromeric
regions. A locus on chromosome 5B carries a gene encoding a metal
transporter (TdHMA3-B1) with a non-functional variant causing
high accumulation of cadmium in grain. The high-cadmium allele,
widespread among durum cultivars but undetected in wild emmer
accessions, increased in frequency from domesticated emmer to modern
durum wheat. The rapid cloning of TdHMA3-B1 rescues a wild beneficial allele and demonstrates the practical use of the Svevo genome for wheat improvement.
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