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The genome of cultivated peanut provides insight into legume karyotypes, polyploid evolution and crop domestication

Authors :
Zhuang, Weijian
Chen, Hua
Yang, Meng
Wang, Jianping
Pandey, Manish K.
Zhang, Chong
Chang, Wen-Chi
Zhang, Liangsheng
Zhang, Xingtan
Tang, Ronghua
Garg, Vanika
Wang, Xingjun
Tang, Haibao
Chow, Chi-Nga
Wang, Jinpeng
Deng, Ye
Wang, Depeng
Khan, Aamir W.
Yang, Qiang
Cai, Tiecheng
Bajaj, Prasad
Wu, Kangcheng
Guo, Baozhu
Zhang, Xinyou
Li, Jingjing
Liang, Fan
Hu, Jiang
Liao, Boshou
Liu, Shengyi
Chitikineni, Annapurna
Yan, Hansong
Zheng, Yixiong
Shan, Shihua
Liu, Qinzheng
Xie, Dongyang
Wang, Zhenyi
Khan, Shahid Ali
Ali, Niaz
Zhao, Chuanzhi
Li, Xinguo
Luo, Ziliang
Zhang, Shubiao
Zhuang, Ruirong
Peng, Ze
Wang, Shuaiyin
Mamadou, Gandeka
Zhuang, Yuhui
Zhao, Zifan
Yu, Weichang
Xiong, Faqian
Quan, Weipeng
Yuan, Mei
Li, Yu
Zou, Huasong
Xia, Han
Zha, Li
Fan, Junpeng
Yu, Jigao
Xie, Wenping
Yuan, Jiaqing
Chen, Kun
Zhao, Shanshan
Chu, Wenting
Chen, Yuting
Sun, Pengchuan
Meng, Fanbo
Zhuo, Tao
Zhao, Yuhao
Li, Chunjuan
He, Guohao
Zhao, Yongli
Wang, Congcong
Kavikishor, Polavarapu Bilhan
Pan, Rong-Long
Paterson, Andrew H.
Wang, Xiyin
Ming, Ray
Varshney, Rajeev K.
Source :
Nature Genetics; May 2019, Vol. 51 Issue: 5 p865-876, 12p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

High oil and protein content make tetraploid peanut a leading oil and food legume. Here we report a high-quality peanut genome sequence, comprising 2.54 Gb with 20 pseudomolecules and 83,709 protein-coding gene models. We characterize gene functional groups implicated in seed size evolution, seed oil content, disease resistance and symbiotic nitrogen fixation. The peanut B subgenome has more genes and general expression dominance, temporally associated with long-terminal-repeat expansion in the A subgenome that also raises questions about the A-genome progenitor. The polyploid genome provided insights into the evolution of Arachis hypogaeaand other legume chromosomes. Resequencing of 52 accessions suggests that independent domestications formed peanut ecotypes. Whereas 0.42–0.47 million years ago (Ma) polyploidy constrained genetic variation, the peanut genome sequence aids mapping and candidate-gene discovery for traits such as seed size and color, foliar disease resistance and others, also providing a cornerstone for functional genomics and peanut improvement.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10614036 and 15461718
Volume :
51
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs49937535
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-019-0402-2