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Analysis of intraspecies diversity in wheat and barley genomes identifies breakpoints of ancient haplotypes and provides insight into the structure of diploid and hexaploid triticeae gene pools.
Plant Physiol. 2009 Jan; 149(1):258-70.PP

Abstract

A large number of wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) varieties have evolved in agricultural ecosystems since domestication. Because of the large, repetitive genomes of these Triticeae crops, sequence information is limited and molecular differences between modern varieties are poorly understood. To study intraspecies genomic diversity, we compared large genomic sequences at the Lr34 locus of the wheat varieties Chinese Spring, Renan, and Glenlea, and diploid wheat Aegilops tauschii. Additionally, we compared the barley loci Vrs1 and Rym4 of the varieties Morex, Cebada Capa, and Haruna Nijo. Molecular dating showed that the wheat D genome haplotypes diverged only a few thousand years ago, while some barley and Ae. tauschii haplotypes diverged more than 500,000 years ago. This suggests gene flow from wild barley relatives after domestication, whereas this was rare or absent in the D genome of hexaploid wheat. In some segments, the compared haplotypes were very similar to each other, but for two varieties each at the Rym4 and Lr34 loci, sequence conservation showed a breakpoint that separates a highly conserved from a less conserved segment. We interpret this as recombination breakpoints of two ancient haplotypes, indicating that the Triticeae genomes are a heterogeneous and variable mosaic of haplotype fragments. Analysis of insertions and deletions showed that large events caused by transposable element insertions, illegitimate recombination, or unequal crossing over were relatively rare. Most insertions and deletions were small and caused by template slippage in short homopolymers of only a few base pairs in size. Such frequent polymorphisms could be exploited for future molecular marker development.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Plant Biology, University of Zurich, 8008 Zurich, Switzerland.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19011002

Citation

Wicker, Thomas, et al. "Analysis of Intraspecies Diversity in Wheat and Barley Genomes Identifies Breakpoints of Ancient Haplotypes and Provides Insight Into the Structure of Diploid and Hexaploid Triticeae Gene Pools." Plant Physiology, vol. 149, no. 1, 2009, pp. 258-70.
Wicker T, Krattinger SG, Lagudah ES, et al. Analysis of intraspecies diversity in wheat and barley genomes identifies breakpoints of ancient haplotypes and provides insight into the structure of diploid and hexaploid triticeae gene pools. Plant Physiol. 2009;149(1):258-70.
Wicker, T., Krattinger, S. G., Lagudah, E. S., Komatsuda, T., Pourkheirandish, M., Matsumoto, T., Cloutier, S., Reiser, L., Kanamori, H., Sato, K., Perovic, D., Stein, N., & Keller, B. (2009). Analysis of intraspecies diversity in wheat and barley genomes identifies breakpoints of ancient haplotypes and provides insight into the structure of diploid and hexaploid triticeae gene pools. Plant Physiology, 149(1), 258-70. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.108.129734
Wicker T, et al. Analysis of Intraspecies Diversity in Wheat and Barley Genomes Identifies Breakpoints of Ancient Haplotypes and Provides Insight Into the Structure of Diploid and Hexaploid Triticeae Gene Pools. Plant Physiol. 2009;149(1):258-70. PubMed PMID: 19011002.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Analysis of intraspecies diversity in wheat and barley genomes identifies breakpoints of ancient haplotypes and provides insight into the structure of diploid and hexaploid triticeae gene pools. AU - Wicker,Thomas, AU - Krattinger,Simon G, AU - Lagudah,Evans S, AU - Komatsuda,Takao, AU - Pourkheirandish,Mohammad, AU - Matsumoto,Takashi, AU - Cloutier,Sylvie, AU - Reiser,Laurenz, AU - Kanamori,Hiroyuki, AU - Sato,Kazuhiro, AU - Perovic,Dragan, AU - Stein,Nils, AU - Keller,Beat, Y1 - 2008/11/14/ PY - 2008/11/18/pubmed PY - 2009/3/4/medline PY - 2008/11/18/entrez SP - 258 EP - 70 JF - Plant physiology JO - Plant Physiol VL - 149 IS - 1 N2 - A large number of wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) varieties have evolved in agricultural ecosystems since domestication. Because of the large, repetitive genomes of these Triticeae crops, sequence information is limited and molecular differences between modern varieties are poorly understood. To study intraspecies genomic diversity, we compared large genomic sequences at the Lr34 locus of the wheat varieties Chinese Spring, Renan, and Glenlea, and diploid wheat Aegilops tauschii. Additionally, we compared the barley loci Vrs1 and Rym4 of the varieties Morex, Cebada Capa, and Haruna Nijo. Molecular dating showed that the wheat D genome haplotypes diverged only a few thousand years ago, while some barley and Ae. tauschii haplotypes diverged more than 500,000 years ago. This suggests gene flow from wild barley relatives after domestication, whereas this was rare or absent in the D genome of hexaploid wheat. In some segments, the compared haplotypes were very similar to each other, but for two varieties each at the Rym4 and Lr34 loci, sequence conservation showed a breakpoint that separates a highly conserved from a less conserved segment. We interpret this as recombination breakpoints of two ancient haplotypes, indicating that the Triticeae genomes are a heterogeneous and variable mosaic of haplotype fragments. Analysis of insertions and deletions showed that large events caused by transposable element insertions, illegitimate recombination, or unequal crossing over were relatively rare. Most insertions and deletions were small and caused by template slippage in short homopolymers of only a few base pairs in size. Such frequent polymorphisms could be exploited for future molecular marker development. SN - 0032-0889 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19011002/Analysis_of_intraspecies_diversity_in_wheat_and_barley_genomes_identifies_breakpoints_of_ancient_haplotypes_and_provides_insight_into_the_structure_of_diploid_and_hexaploid_triticeae_gene_pools_ L2 - https://academic.oup.com/plphys/article-lookup/doi/10.1104/pp.108.129734 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -