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Latitudinal adaptation and dispersal pathway of foxtail millet suggested by geographical distribution of transposable elements inserted in the SiPRR37 gene.

Kenji FukunagaAkira AbeKazue ItoKaori OikawaMasaya TsujiMakoto Kawase
Published in: Genes & genetic systems (2024)
We investigated the variation and geographical distribution of the Pseudo-regulator response 37 (Setaria italica PRR37; SiPRR37) gene, which is involved in heading time (photoperiodism) in foxtail millet. An allele of the SiPRR37 gene, in which an approximately 4.9-kb transposable element (designated TE1) is inserted (a loss-of-function or reduction-of-function type), is distributed sporadically in East Asia and broadly in Southeast Asia and South Asia, implying that this gene is important in latitudinal adaptation. In addition, we found a new allele of SiPRR37 with an insertion of a 360-bp TE (TE2) at this locus and investigated the geographical distribution of this new type. This SiPRR37 allele with TE2 is distributed in Japan, Korea, Nepal, Iran and Turkey. Both TE1 and TE2 are useful markers for tracing foxtail millet dispersal pathways in Asia.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • atomic force microscopy
  • dna methylation
  • high resolution