Recent polyploidization events in three <i>Saccharum</i> founding species

Jisen Zhang(Fujian Normal University), Qing Zhang(Wuhan Botanical Garden), Leiting Li(Nanjing Agricultural University), Haibao Tang(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Qiong Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Chen(Fujian Normal University), Jie Arrow(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Xingtan Zhang(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Aiqin Wang(Guangxi University), Chenyong Miao(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Ray Ming(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
Plant Biotechnology Journal
June 7, 2018
Cited by 77Open Access
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Abstract

individuals derived from S. officinarumLA Purple and S. robustum Molokai 5829 (2n = 80, x = 10 for both) were sequenced, yielding 11 157 and 8998 SNPs and 83 and 105 linkage groups, respectively. Most markers in each linkage group aligned to single sorghum chromosome. However, 71 interchromosomal rearrangements were detected between sorghum and S. officinarum or S. robustum, and 24 (33.8%) of them were shared between S. officinarum and S. robustum, indicating their occurrence before the speciation event that separated these two species. More than 2000 gene pairs from S. spontaneum, S. officinarum and S. robustum were analysed to estimate their divergence time. Saccharum officinarum and S. robustum diverged about 385 thousand years ago, and the whole-genome duplication events occurred after the speciation event because of shared interchromosomal rearrangements. The ancestor of these two species diverged from S. spontaneum about 769 thousand years ago, and the reduction in basic chromosome number from 10 to 8 in S. spontaneum occurred after the speciation event but before the two rounds of whole-genome duplication. Our results proved that S. officinarum is a legitimate species in its own right and not a selection from S. robustum during the domestication process in the past 10 000 years. Our findings rejected a long-standing hypothesis and clarified the timing of speciation and whole-genome duplication events in Saccharum.


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