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Comparative evolutionary genetics of deleterious load in sorghum and maize.

Roberto LozanoElodie GazaveJhonathan P R Dos SantosMarkus G StetterRavi ValluruNonoy BandilloSamuel B FernandesPatrick J BrownNadia ShakoorTodd C MocklerElizabeth A CooperM Taylor PerkinsEdward S BucklerJeffrey Ross-IbarraMichael A Gore
Published in: Nature plants (2021)
Sorghum and maize share a close evolutionary history that can be explored through comparative genomics1,2. To perform a large-scale comparison of the genomic variation between these two species, we analysed ~13 million variants identified from whole-genome resequencing of 499 sorghum lines together with 25 million variants previously identified in 1,218 maize lines. Deleterious mutations in both species were prevalent in pericentromeric regions, enriched in non-syntenic genes and present at low allele frequencies. A comparison of deleterious burden between sorghum and maize revealed that sorghum, in contrast to maize, departed from the domestication-cost hypothesis that predicts a higher deleterious burden among domesticates compared with wild lines. Additionally, sorghum and maize population genetic summary statistics were used to predict a gene deleterious index with an accuracy greater than 0.5. This research represents a key step towards understanding the evolutionary dynamics of deleterious variants in sorghum and provides a comparative genomics framework to start prioritizing these variants for removal through genome editing and breeding.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • genome editing
  • crispr cas
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • risk factors
  • gene expression
  • bioinformatics analysis