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The complex polyploid genome architecture of sugarcane
Thursday, 2024/06/27 | 08:24:34

A L HealeyO GarsmeurJ T LovellS Shengquiang, A SreedasyamJ JenkinsC B PlottN PiperidisN PompidorV LlacaC J MetcalfeJ DoleželP CápalJ W CarlsonJ Y HoarauC HervouetC ZiniA DievartA LipzenM WilliamsL B BostonJ WebberK KeymaneshS TejomurthulaS RajasekarR SucheckiA FurtadoG MayP ParakkalB A SimmonsK BarryR J HenryJ GrimwoodK S AitkenJ SchmutzA D'Hont

Nature; 2024 Apr; 628(8009):804-810. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07231-4.

Abstract

Sugarcane, the world's most harvested crop by tonnage, has shaped global history, trade and geopolitics, and is currently responsible for 80% of sugar production worldwide1. While traditional sugarcane breeding methods have effectively generated cultivars adapted to new environments and pathogens, sugar yield improvements have recently plateaued2. The cessation of yield gains may be due to limited genetic diversity within breeding populations, long breeding cycles and the complexity of its genome, the latter preventing breeders from taking advantage of the recent explosion of whole-genome sequencing that has benefited many other crops. Thus, modern sugarcane hybrids are the last remaining major crop without a reference-quality genome. Here we take a major step towards advancing sugarcane biotechnology by generating a polyploid reference genome for R570, a typical modern cultivar derived from interspecific hybridization between the domesticated species (Saccharum officinarum) and the wild species (Saccharum spontaneum). In contrast to the existing single haplotype ('monoploid') representation of R570, our 8.7 billion base assembly contains a complete representation of unique DNA sequences across the approximately 12 chromosome copies in this polyploid genome. Using this highly contiguous genome assembly, we filled a previously unsized gap within an R570 physical genetic map to describe the likely causal genes underlying the single-copy Bru1 brown rust resistance locus. This polyploid genome assembly with fine-grain descriptions of genome architecture and molecular targets for biotechnology will help accelerate molecular and transgenic breeding and adaptation of sugarcane to future environmental conditions.

 

See https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38538783/

 

Fig. 3

Bru1 candidate gene locus.

a, Brown rust disease resistance in R570. Top panel shows selfed R570 offspring with the Bru1 locus, while the bottom panel shows offspring lacking Bru1b, Gap-filled haplotype assembly identifies a TKP as candidate causal genes for Bru1 durable brown rust resistance. Blue pentagons represent curated gene models and grey pentagons are large transposable elements. Bru1 TKP7 and TKP8 candidate genes are indicated in red with their location on Chr. 3D.

 

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