Integrating evolutionary genomics of forest trees to inform future tree breeding amid rapid climate change

被引:0
作者
Feng, Jiajun [1 ]
Dan, Xuming [1 ]
Cui, Yangkai [1 ]
Gong, Yi [1 ]
Peng, Minyue [1 ]
Sang, Yupeng [1 ]
Ingvarsson, Par K. [2 ]
Wang, Jing [1 ]
机构
[1] Sichuan Univ, Coll Life Sci, Key Lab Bioresources & Ecoenvironm, Minist Educ, Chengdu, Peoples R China
[2] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Linnean Ctr Plant Biol, Dept Plant Biol, Uppsala, Sweden
关键词
forest trees; climate change; multi-omics; evolutionary genomics; breeding; CIS-REGULATORY ELEMENTS; DNA METHYLATION; LOCAL ADAPTATION; MISSING HERITABILITY; EPIGENETIC VARIATION; POPULATION GENOMICS; ECOLOGICAL GENOMICS; WIDE ASSOCIATION; WOOD QUALITY; GENE FLOW;
D O I
10.1016/j.xplc.2024.101044
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Global climate change is leading to rapid and drastic shifts in environmental conditions, posing threats to biodiversity and nearly all life forms worldwide. Forest trees serve as foundational components of terrestrial ecosystems and play a crucial and leading role in combating and mitigating the adverse effects of extreme climate events, despite their own vulnerability to these threats. Therefore, understanding and monitoring how natural forests respond to rapid climate change is a key priority for biodiversity conservation. Recent progress in evolutionary genomics, driven primarily by cutting-edge multi-omics technologies, offers powerful new tools to address several key issues. These include precise delineation of species and evolutionary units, inference of past evolutionary histories and demographic fluctuations, identification of environmentally adaptive variants, and measurement of genetic load levels. As the urgency to deal with more extreme environmental stresses grows, understanding the genomics of evolutionary history, local adaptation, future responses to climate change, and conservation and restoration of natural forest trees will be critical for research at the nexus of global change, population genomics, and conservation biology. In this review, we explore the application of evolutionary genomics to assess the effects of global climate change using multi-omics approaches and discuss the outlook for breeding of climate-adapted trees.
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页数:23
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