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A graph-based genome and pan-genome variation of the model plant Setaria.

Qiang HeSha TangHui ZhiJinfeng ChenJun ZhangHongkai LiangOrnob AlamHongbo LiHui ZhangLihe XingLiangcai PengWei ZhangHailong WangJunpeng ShiHuilong DuHongpo WuLiwei WangPing YangLu XingHongshan YanZhongqiang SongJinrong LiuHaigang WangXiang TianZhijun QiaoGuojun FengRuifeng GuoWenjuan ZhuYuemei RenHongbo HaoMingzhe LiAiying ZhangErhu GuoFeng YanQingquan LiYanli LiuBohong TianXiaoqin ZhaoRuiling JiaBaili FengJiewei ZhangJianhua WeiJinsheng LaiGuanqing JiaMichael D PuruggananXianmin Diao
Published in: Nature genetics (2023)
Setaria italica (foxtail millet), a founder crop of East Asian agriculture, is a model plant for C4 photosynthesis and developing approaches to adaptive breeding across multiple climates. Here we established the Setaria pan-genome by assembling 110 representative genomes from a worldwide collection. The pan-genome is composed of 73,528 gene families, of which 23.8%, 42.9%, 29.4% and 3.9% are core, soft core, dispensable and private genes, respectively; 202,884 nonredundant structural variants were also detected. The characterization of pan-genomic variants suggests their importance during foxtail millet domestication and improvement, as exemplified by the identification of the yield gene SiGW3, where a 366-bp presence/absence promoter variant accompanies gene expression variation. We developed a graph-based genome and performed large-scale genetic studies for 68 traits across 13 environments, identifying potential genes for millet improvement at different geographic sites. These can be used in marker-assisted breeding, genomic selection and genome editing to accelerate crop improvement under different climatic conditions.
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