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Chromosome-level genome assembly and population genomic resource to accelerate orphan crop lablab breeding.

Isaac NjaciBernice WaweruNadia KamalMeki Shehabu MuktarDavid FisherHeidrun GundlachCollins MuliLucy MuthuiMary MarangaDavies KiambiBrigitte L MaassPeter M F EmmrichJean-Baka Domelevo EntfellnerManuel SpannaglMark A ChapmanOluwaseyi ShorinolaChris Stephen Jones
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Under-utilised orphan crops hold the key to diversified and climate-resilient food systems. Here, we report on orphan crop genomics using the case of Lablab purpureus (L.) Sweet (lablab) - a legume native to Africa and cultivated throughout the tropics for food and forage. Our Africa-led plant genome collaboration produces a high-quality chromosome-scale assembly of the lablab genome. Our assembly highlights the genome organisation of the trypsin inhibitor genes - an important anti-nutritional factor in lablab. We also re-sequence cultivated and wild lablab accessions from Africa confirming two domestication events. Finally, we examine the genetic and phenotypic diversity in a comprehensive lablab germplasm collection and identify genomic loci underlying variation of important agronomic traits in lablab. The genomic data generated here provide a valuable resource for lablab improvement. Our inclusive collaborative approach also presents an example that can be explored by other researchers sequencing indigenous crops, particularly from low and middle-income countries (LMIC).
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • climate change
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • transcription factor
  • machine learning
  • data analysis
  • human health
  • electronic health record