Draft genome of the wheat A-genome progenitor Triticum urartu

Hong‐Qing Ling(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shancen Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Dongcheng Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Junyi Wang(BGI Group (China)), Hua Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chi Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Huajie Fan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dong Li(BGI Group (China)), Lingli Dong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yong Tao(BGI Group (China)), Chuan Gao(BGI Group (China)), Huilan Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yiwen Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaosen Guo(BGI Group (China)), Shusong Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Biao Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kang Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qinsi Liang(BGI Group (China)), Wenlong Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xueyuan Lou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jie Chen(BGI Group (China)), Mingji Feng(BGI Group (China)), Jianbo Jian(BGI Group (China)), Xiaofei Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guangbin Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ying Jiang(BGI Group (China)), Junjie Liu(BGI Group (China)), Zhaobao Wang(BGI Group (China)), Yuhui Sha(BGI Group (China)), Bairu Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hua‐Jun Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dingzhong Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qian‐Hua Shen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Pengya Xue(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shenhao Zou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiu‐Jie Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xin Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Famin Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yanping Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xueli An(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhenying Dong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kunpu Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiangqi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ming‐Cheng Luo(University of California, Davis), Jan Dvořák(University of California, Davis), Yi‐Ping Tong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jian Wang(BGI Group (China)), Huanming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Zhensheng Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Daowen Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Aimin Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China))
Nature
March 22, 2013
Cited by 769Open Access
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Abstract

The genome sequence and its analysis of the diploid wild wheat Triticum urartu (progenitor of the wheat A genome) represent a tool for studying the complex, polyploid wheat genomes and should be a valuable resource for the genetic improvement of wheat. The hexaploid genome of bread wheat Triticum aestivum, designated AABBDD, evolved as a result of hybridization between three ancestral grasses. Two papers published in the issue of Nature present genome sequences and analysis of two of these wheat progenitors. First, the genome sequence of the diploid wild wheat T. urartu (ancestor of the A genome), which resembles cultivated wheat more strongly than either Aegilops speltoides (the B ancestor) or Ae. tauschii (the D donor). And second, the Ae. tauschii genome, together with an analysis of its transcriptome. These genomes and their analyses will be powerful tools for the study of complex, polyploid wheat genomes and a valuable resource for genetic improvement of wheat. Bread wheat (Triticum aestivum, AABBDD) is one of the most widely cultivated and consumed food crops in the world. However, the complex polyploid nature of its genome makes genetic and functional analyses extremely challenging. The A genome, as a basic genome of bread wheat and other polyploid wheats, for example, T. turgidum (AABB), T. timopheevii (AAGG) and T. zhukovskyi (AAGGAmAm), is central to wheat evolution, domestication and genetic improvement1. The progenitor species of the A genome is the diploid wild einkorn wheat T. urartu2, which resembles cultivated wheat more extensively than do Aegilops speltoides (the ancestor of the B genome3) and Ae. tauschii (the donor of the D genome4), especially in the morphology and development of spike and seed. Here we present the generation, assembly and analysis of a whole-genome shotgun draft sequence of the T. urartu genome. We identified protein-coding gene models, performed genome structure analyses and assessed its utility for analysing agronomically important genes and for developing molecular markers. Our T. urartu genome assembly provides a diploid reference for analysis of polyploid wheat genomes and is a valuable resource for the genetic improvement of wheat.


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