Tracing the genetic diversity of the bread wheat D genome

Zihao Wang(China Agricultural University), Wenxi Wang(China Agricultural University), Yachao He(China Agricultural University), Xiaoming Xie(China Agricultural University), Zhengzhao Yang(China Agricultural University), Xiaoyu Zhang(China Agricultural University), Jianxia Niu(China Agricultural University), Huiru Peng(China Agricultural University), Yingyin Yao(China Agricultural University), Chaojie Xie(China Agricultural University), Mingming Xin(China Agricultural University), Zhaorong Hu(China Agricultural University), Qixin Sun(China Agricultural University), Zhongfu Ni(China Agricultural University), Weilong Guo(China Agricultural University)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
August 24, 2024
Cited by 0Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Bread wheat ( Triticum aestivum ) became a globally dominant crop after incorporating the D genome from donor species Aegilops tauschii , while evolutionary history shaping the D genome during this process remains elusive. Here, we proposed a renewed evolutionary model linking Ae. tauschii and hexaploid wheat D genome, based on an ancestral haplotype map covering a total of 762 Ae. tauschii and hexaploid wheat accessions. We dissected the evolutionary process of Ae. tauschii lineages and clarified L3 as the most ancient lineage. A few independent intermediate accessions were reported, demonstrating the low-frequent inter-sublineage geneflow enriched the diversity of Ae. tauschii . We discovered that the D genome of hexaploid wheat inherited from a unified ancestral template, but with a mosaic composition that is highly mixed by three Ae. tauschii L2 sublineages located in the Caspian coastal region, suggesting the early agricultural activities facilitate the innovation of D genome compositions that finalized the success of hexaploidization. We further found that the majority (65.6%) of polymorphisms were attributed to novel mutations absent during the spreading of bread wheat, and also identified large Ae. tauschii introgressions from wild Aegilops lineages, expanding the diversity of wheat D genome and introducing beneficial alleles. This work decoded the mystery of the wheat hexaploidization process and the evolutionary significance of the multi-layered origins of the genetic diversity of the bread wheat D genome.


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