| Literature DB >> 29736014 |
Xiongming Du1,2, Gai Huang3,4, Shoupu He2, Zhaoen Yang2, Gaofei Sun1, Xiongfeng Ma2, Nan Li5, Xueyan Zhang2, Junling Sun2, Min Liu6, Yinhua Jia2, Zhaoe Pan2, Wenfang Gong2, Zhaohui Liu3, Heqin Zhu2, Lei Ma2, Fuyan Liu6, Daigang Yang2, Fan Wang6, Wei Fan5, Qian Gong2, Zhen Peng2, Liru Wang2, Xiaoyang Wang2, Shuangjiao Xu2, Haihong Shang2, Cairui Lu2, Hongkun Zheng6, Sanwen Huang5, Tao Lin7, Yuxian Zhu8,9, Fuguang Li10,11.
Abstract
The ancestors of Gossypium arboreum and Gossypium herbaceum provided the A subgenome for the modern cultivated allotetraploid cotton. Here, we upgraded the G. arboreum genome assembly by integrating different technologies. We resequenced 243 G. arboreum and G. herbaceum accessions to generate a map of genome variations and found that they are equally diverged from Gossypium raimondii. Independent analysis suggested that Chinese G. arboreum originated in South China and was subsequently introduced to the Yangtze and Yellow River regions. Most accessions with domestication-related traits experienced geographic isolation. Genome-wide association study (GWAS) identified 98 significant peak associations for 11 agronomically important traits in G. arboreum. A nonsynonymous substitution (cysteine-to-arginine substitution) of GaKASIII seems to confer substantial fatty acid composition (C16:0 and C16:1) changes in cotton seeds. Resistance to fusarium wilt disease is associated with activation of GaGSTF9 expression. Our work represents a major step toward understanding the evolution of the A genome of cotton.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29736014 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-018-0116-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330