Login / Signup

High-quality genome assembly and resequencing of modern cotton cultivars provide resources for crop improvement.

Zhiying MaYan ZhangLiqiang WuGuiyin ZhangZhengwen SunZhikun LiYafei JiangHuifeng KeBin ChenZhengwen LiuQishen GuZhicheng WangGuoning WangJun YangJinhua WuYuanyuan YanChengsheng MengLihua LiXiuxin LiShaojing MoNan WuLimei MaLiting ChenMan ZhangAijun SiZhanwu YangNan WangLizhu WuDongmei ZhangYanru CuiJing CuiXing LvYang LiRongkang ShiYihong DuanShilin TianXingfen Wang
Published in: Nature genetics (2021)
Cotton produces natural fiber for the textile industry. The genetic effects of genomic structural variations underlying agronomic traits remain unclear. Here, we generate two high-quality genomes of Gossypium hirsutum cv. NDM8 and Gossypium barbadense acc. Pima90, and identify large-scale structural variations in the two species and 1,081 G. hirsutum accessions. The density of structural variations is higher in the D-subgenome than in the A-subgenome, indicating that the D-subgenome undergoes stronger selection during species formation and variety development. Many structural variations in genes and/or regulatory regions potentially influencing agronomic traits were discovered. Of 446 significantly associated structural variations, those for fiber quality and Verticillium wilt resistance are located mainly in the D-subgenome and those for yield mainly in the A-subgenome. Our research provides insight into the role of structural variations in genotype-to-phenotype relationships and their potential utility in crop improvement.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • genome wide analysis
  • copy number
  • wastewater treatment
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • risk assessment