Author
Listed:
- Chengzhi Jiao
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
Nanjing Agricultural University)
- Xiaoming Xie
(China Agricultural University)
- Chenyang Hao
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Liyang Chen
(Smartgenomics Technology Institute)
- Yuxin Xie
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Vanika Garg
(Murdoch University)
- Li Zhao
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Zihao Wang
(China Agricultural University)
- Yuqi Zhang
(China Agricultural University)
- Tian Li
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Junjie Fu
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Annapurna Chitikineni
(Murdoch University)
- Jian Hou
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Hongxia Liu
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Girish Dwivedi
(the University of Western Australia
Fiona Stanley Hospital)
- Xu Liu
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Jizeng Jia
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Long Mao
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
- Xiue Wang
(Nanjing Agricultural University)
- Rudi Appels
(Murdoch University
La Trobe University)
- Rajeev K. Varshney
(Murdoch University)
- Weilong Guo
(China Agricultural University)
- Xueyong Zhang
(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
Abstract
Wheat is the second largest food crop with a very good breeding system and pedigree record in China. Investigating the genomic footprints of wheat cultivars will unveil potential avenues for future breeding efforts1,2. Here we report chromosome-level genome assemblies of 17 wheat cultivars that chronicle the breeding history of China. Comparative genomic analysis uncovered a wealth of structural rearrangements, identifying 249,976 structural variations with 49.03% (122,567) longer than 5 kb. Cultivars developed in 1980s displayed significant accumulations of structural variations, a pattern linked to the extensive incorporation of European and American varieties into breeding programmes of that era. We further proved that structural variations in the centromere-proximal regions are associated with a reduction of crossover events. We showed that common wheat evolved from spring to winter types via mutations and duplications of the VRN-A1 gene as an adaptation strategy to a changing environment. We confirmed shifts in wheat cultivars linked to dietary preferences, migration and cultural integration in Northwest China. We identified large presence or absence variations of pSc200 tandem repeats on the 1RS terminal, suggesting its own rapid evolution in the wheat genome. The high-quality genome assemblies of 17 representatives developed and their good complementarity to the 10+ pan-genomes offer a robust platform for future genomics-assisted breeding in wheat.
Suggested Citation
Chengzhi Jiao & Xiaoming Xie & Chenyang Hao & Liyang Chen & Yuxin Xie & Vanika Garg & Li Zhao & Zihao Wang & Yuqi Zhang & Tian Li & Junjie Fu & Annapurna Chitikineni & Jian Hou & Hongxia Liu & Girish , 2025.
"Pan-genome bridges wheat structural variations with habitat and breeding,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 637(8045), pages 384-393, January.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:637:y:2025:i:8045:d:10.1038_s41586-024-08277-0
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08277-0
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