Pangenomic analysis identifies structural variation associated with heat tolerance in pearl millet

Haidong Yan(University of Georgia), Min Sun(Sichuan Agricultural University), Zhongren Zhang(Novogene Bioinformatics Institute), Yarong Jin(Sichuan Agricultural University), Ailing Zhang(Sichuan Agricultural University), Chuang Lin(Sichuan Agricultural University), Bingchao Wu(Sichuan Agricultural University), Min He(Sichuan Agricultural University), Bin Xu(Nanjing Agricultural University), Jing Wang(Sichuan University), Peng Qin(Sichuan Agricultural University), John Pablo Mendieta(University of Georgia), Gang Nie(Sichuan Agricultural University), Jianping Wang(Sichuan University), Chris S. Jones(International Livestock Research Institute), Guangyan Feng(Sichuan Agricultural University), Rakesh K. Srivastava(International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics), Xinquan Zhang(Sichuan Agricultural University), Aureliano Bombarely(Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas), Dan Luo(Sichuan Agricultural University), Long Jin(Sichuan Agricultural University), Yuanying Peng(Sichuan Agricultural University), Xiaoshan Wang(Sichuan Agricultural University), Yang Ji(Sichuan Animal Science Academy), Shilin Tian(Wuhan University), Linkai Huang(Sichuan Agricultural University)
Nature Genetics
March 1, 2023
Cited by 178Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Pearl millet is an important cereal crop worldwide and shows superior heat tolerance. Here, we developed a graph-based pan-genome by assembling ten chromosomal genomes with one existing assembly adapted to different climates worldwide and captured 424,085 genomic structural variations (SVs). Comparative genomics and transcriptomics analyses revealed the expansion of the RWP-RK transcription factor family and the involvement of endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-related genes in heat tolerance. The overexpression of one RWP-RK gene led to enhanced plant heat tolerance and transactivated ER-related genes quickly, supporting the important roles of RWP-RK transcription factors and ER system in heat tolerance. Furthermore, we found that some SVs affected the gene expression associated with heat tolerance and SVs surrounding ER-related genes shaped adaptation to heat tolerance during domestication in the population. Our study provides a comprehensive genomic resource revealing insights into heat tolerance and laying a foundation for generating more robust crops under the changing climate.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis