Origin and adaptation to high altitude of Tibetan semi-wild wheat

被引:0
作者
Weilong Guo
Mingming Xin
Zihao Wang
Yingyin Yao
Zhaorong Hu
Wanjun Song
Kuohai Yu
Yongming Chen
Xiaobo Wang
Panfeng Guan
Rudi Appels
Huiru Peng
Zhongfu Ni
Qixin Sun
机构
[1] State Key Laboratory for Agrobiotechnology,
[2] Key Laboratory of Crop Heterosis and Utilization (MOE),undefined
[3] Beijing Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement,undefined
[4] China Agricultural University,undefined
[5] AgriBio,undefined
[6] Centre for AgriBioscience,undefined
[7] Department of Economic Development,undefined
[8] Jobs,undefined
[9] Transport,undefined
[10] and Resources,undefined
[11] 5 Ring Road,undefined
[12] La Trobe University,undefined
[13] University of Melbourne,undefined
[14] FVAS,undefined
来源
Nature Communications | / 11卷
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摘要
Tibetan wheat is grown under environmental constraints at high-altitude conditions, but its underlying adaptation mechanism remains unknown. Here, we present a draft genome sequence of a Tibetan semi-wild wheat (Triticum aestivum ssp. tibetanum Shao) accession Zang1817 and re-sequence 245 wheat accessions, including world-wide wheat landraces, cultivars as well as Tibetan landraces. We demonstrate that high-altitude environments can trigger extensive reshaping of wheat genomes, and also uncover that Tibetan wheat accessions accumulate high-altitude adapted haplotypes of related genes in response to harsh environmental constraints. Moreover, we find that Tibetan semi-wild wheat is a feral form of Tibetan landrace, and identify two associated loci, including a 0.8-Mb deletion region containing Brt1/2 homologs and a genomic region with TaQ-5A gene, responsible for rachis brittleness during the de-domestication episode. Our study provides confident evidence to support the hypothesis that Tibetan semi-wild wheat is de-domesticated from local landraces, in response to high-altitude extremes.
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