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Genome of Paspalum vaginatum and the role of trehalose mediated autophagy in increasing maize biomass

Authors :
Guangchao Sun
Nishikant Wase
Shengqiang Shu
Jerry Jenkins
Bangjun Zhou
J. Vladimir Torres-Rodríguez
Cindy Chen
Laura Sandor
Chris Plott
Yuko Yoshinga
Christopher Daum
Peng Qi
Kerrie Barry
Anna Lipzen
Luke Berry
Connor Pedersen
Thomas Gottilla
Ashley Foltz
Huihui Yu
Ronan O’Malley
Chi Zhang
Katrien M. Devos
Brandi Sigmon
Bin Yu
Toshihiro Obata
Jeremy Schmutz
James C. Schnable
Source :
Nature communications, vol 13, iss 1
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

A number of crop wild relatives can tolerate extreme stress to a degree outside the range observed in their domesticated relatives. However, it is unclear whether or how the molecular mechanisms employed by these species can be translated to domesticated crops. Paspalum (Paspalum vaginatum) is a self-incompatible and multiply stress-tolerant wild relative of maize and sorghum. Here, we describe the sequencing and pseudomolecule level assembly of a vegetatively propagated accession of P. vaginatum. Phylogenetic analysis based on 6,151 single-copy syntenic orthologues conserved in 6 related grass species places paspalum as an outgroup of the maize-sorghum clade. In parallel metabolic experiments, paspalum, but neither maize nor sorghum, exhibits a significant increase in trehalose when grown under nutrient-deficit conditions. Inducing trehalose accumulation in maize, imitating the metabolic phenotype of paspalum, results in autophagy dependent increases in biomass accumulation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications, vol 13, iss 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a1aebd6284138faeccf592761a90ad5a