Haploidy and aneuploidy in switchgrass mediated by misexpression of CENH3.
Sangwoong YoonJennifer BraggSheyla Aucar-YamatoLisa ChanbusarakumKurtis DlugePrisca ChengEduardo BlumwaldYong GuChristian M TobiasPublished in: The plant genome (2022)
Cross bred species such as switchgrass may benefit from advantageous breeding strategies requiring inbred lines. Doubled haploid production methods offer several ways that these lines can be produced that often involve uniparental genome elimination as the rate limiting step. We have used a centromere-mediated genome elimination strategy in which modified CENH3 is expressed to induce the process. Transgenic tetraploid switchgrass lines coexpressed Cas9, a poly-cistronic tRNA-gRNA tandem array containing eight guide RNAs that target two CENH3 genes, and different chimeric versions of CENH3 with alterations to the N-terminal tail region. Genotyping of CENH3 genes in transgenics identified edits including frameshift mutations and deletions in one or both copies of the two CENH3 genes. Flow cytometry of T 1 seedlings identified two T 0 lines that produced five haploid individuals representing an induction rate of 0.5% and 1.4%. Eight different T 0 lines produced aneuploids at rates ranging from 2.1 to 14.6%. A sample of aneuploid lines were sequenced at low coverage and aligned to the reference genome, revealing missing chromosomes and chromosome arms.