| Literature DB >> 33397978 |
Myung-Shin Kim1,2, Roberto Lozano3, Ji Hong Kim1, Dong Nyuk Bae1, Sang-Tae Kim4, Jung-Ho Park1, Man Soo Choi5, Jaehyun Kim5, Hyun-Choong Ok5, Soo-Kwon Park5, Michael A Gore3, Jung-Kyung Moon6,7, Soon-Chun Jeong8.
Abstract
Globally, soybean is a major protein and oil crop. Enhancing our understanding of the soybean domestication and improvement process helps boost genomics-assisted breeding efforts. Here we present a genome-wide variation map of 10.6 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms and 1.4 million indels for 781 soybean individuals which includes 418 domesticated (Glycine max), 345 wild (Glycine soja), and 18 natural hybrid (G. max/G. soja) accessions. We describe the enhanced detection of 183 domestication-selective sweeps and the patterns of putative deleterious mutations during domestication and improvement. This predominantly selfing species shows 7.1% reduction of overall deleterious mutations in domesticated soybean relative to wild soybean and a further 1.4% reduction from landrace to improved accessions. The detected domestication-selective sweeps also show reduced levels of deleterious alleles. Importantly, genotype imputation with this resource increases the mapping resolution of genome-wide association studies for seed protein and oil traits in a soybean diversity panel.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33397978 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20337-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919