1. High level of somatic mutations detected in a diploid banana wild relative Musa basjoo
- Author
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Yilun Ji, Xiaonan Chen, Shengqiu Lin, Milton Brian Traw, Dacheng Tian, Sihai Yang, Long Wang, and Ju Huang
- Subjects
Plant Breeding ,Reproduction ,Mutation ,Genetics ,Musa ,General Medicine ,Diploidy ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Plants are thought to lack an early segregating germline and often retain both asexual and sexual reproduction, both of which may allow somatic mutations to enter the gametes or clonal progeny, and thereby impact plant evolution. It is yet unclear how often these somatic mutations occur during plant development and what proportion is transmitted to their sexual or cloned offspring. Asexual "seedless" propagation has contributed greatly to the breeding in many fruit crops, such as citrus, grapes and bananas. Whether plants in these lineages experience substantial somatic mutation accumulation is unknown. To estimate the somatic mutation accumulation and inheritance among a clonal population of plant, here we assess somatic mutation accumulation in Musa basjoo, a diploid banana wild relative, using 30 whole-genome resequenced samples collected from five structures, including leaves, sheaths, panicle, roots and underground rhizome connecting three clonal individuals. We observed 18.5 high proportion de novo somatic mutations on average between each two adjacent clonal suckers, equivalent to ~ 2.48 × 10
- Published
- 2022
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