Origin and adaptation to high altitude of Tibetan semi-wild wheat

Tibetan wheat is grown under environmental constraints at high-altitude conditions, but its underlying adaptation mechanism remains unknown. Here, we present a draft genome sequence of a Tibetan semi-wild wheat ( Triticum aestivum ssp. tibetanum Shao) accession Zang1817 and re-sequence 245 wheat acc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-10, Vol.11 (1), p.5085-5085, Article 5085
Hauptverfasser: Guo, Weilong, Xin, Mingming, Wang, Zihao, Yao, Yingyin, Hu, Zhaorong, Song, Wanjun, Yu, Kuohai, Chen, Yongming, Wang, Xiaobo, Guan, Panfeng, Appels, Rudi, Peng, Huiru, Ni, Zhongfu, Sun, Qixin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tibetan wheat is grown under environmental constraints at high-altitude conditions, but its underlying adaptation mechanism remains unknown. Here, we present a draft genome sequence of a Tibetan semi-wild wheat ( Triticum aestivum ssp. tibetanum Shao) accession Zang1817 and re-sequence 245 wheat accessions, including world-wide wheat landraces, cultivars as well as Tibetan landraces. We demonstrate that high-altitude environments can trigger extensive reshaping of wheat genomes, and also uncover that Tibetan wheat accessions accumulate high-altitude adapted haplotypes of related genes in response to harsh environmental constraints. Moreover, we find that Tibetan semi-wild wheat is a feral form of Tibetan landrace, and identify two associated loci, including a 0.8-Mb deletion region containing Brt1/2 homologs and a genomic region with TaQ-5A gene, responsible for rachis brittleness during the de-domestication episode. Our study provides confident evidence to support the hypothesis that Tibetan semi-wild wheat is de-domesticated from local landraces, in response to high-altitude extremes. Mechanism of high altitude adaptation of wheat remains unknown. Here, the authors assemble the draft genome of a Tibetan semi-wild wheat accession and resequence 245 wheat accessions to reveal that Tibetan semi-wild wheat has been de-domesticated from local landraces to adapt to high altitude.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-18738-5