Exceptional subgenome stability and functional divergence in the allotetraploid Ethiopian cereal teff.
Robert VanBurenChing Man Jennifer WaiXuewen WangJeremy PardoAlan E YoccaHao WangSrinivasa R ChaluvadiGuomin HanDouglas BryantPatrick P EdgerJoachim MessingMark E SorrellsTodd C MocklerJeffrey L BennetzenTodd P MichaelPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Teff (Eragrostis tef) is a cornerstone of food security in the Horn of Africa, where it is prized for stress resilience, grain nutrition, and market value. Here, we report a chromosome-scale assembly of allotetraploid teff (variety Dabbi) and patterns of subgenome dynamics. The teff genome contains two complete sets of homoeologous chromosomes, with most genes maintaining as syntenic gene pairs. TE analysis allows us to estimate that the teff polyploidy event occurred ~1.1 million years ago (mya) and that the two subgenomes diverged ~5.0 mya. Despite this divergence, we detect no large-scale structural rearrangements, homoeologous exchanges, or biased gene loss, in contrast to many other allopolyploids. The two teff subgenomes have partitioned their ancestral functions based on divergent expression across a diverse expression atlas. Together, these genomic resources will be useful for accelerating breeding of this underutilized grain crop and for fundamental insights into polyploid genome evolution.