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A large-scale whole-exome sequencing mutant resource for functional genomics in wheat
Authors:Hongchun Xiong  Huijun Guo  Meiyu Fu  Yongdun Xie  Linshu Zhao  Jiayu Gu  Shirong Zhao  Yuping Ding  Qidi Du  Jiazi Zhang  Lin Qiu  Xiaomei Xie  Libin Zhou  Zhongxu Chen  Luxiang Liu
Institution:1. Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences/National Engineering Laboratory for Crop Molecular Breeding, National Center of Space Mutagenesis for Crop Improvement, Beijing, China

These authors contributed equally to this work.;2. Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences/National Engineering Laboratory for Crop Molecular Breeding, National Center of Space Mutagenesis for Crop Improvement, Beijing, China;3. Biophysics Group, Institute of Modern Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou, China;4. Department of Life Science, Tcuni Inc., Chengdu, China

Abstract:Hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum), a major staple crop, has a remarkably large genome of ~14.4 Gb (containing 106 913 high-confidence HC] and 159 840 low-confidence LC] genes in the Chinese Spring v2.1 reference genome), which poses a major challenge for functional genomics studies. To overcome this hurdle, we performed whole-exome sequencing to generate a nearly saturated wheat mutant database containing 18 025 209 mutations induced by ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), carbon (C)-ion beams, or γ-ray mutagenesis. This database contains an average of 47.1 mutations per kb in each gene-coding sequence: the potential functional mutations were predicted to cover 96.7% of HC genes and 70.5% of LC genes. Comparative analysis of mutations induced by EMS, γ-rays, or C-ion beam irradiation revealed that γ-ray and C-ion beam mutagenesis induced a more diverse array of variations than EMS, including large-fragment deletions, small insertions/deletions, and various non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms. As a test case, we combined mutation analysis with phenotypic screening and rapidly mapped the candidate gene responsible for the phenotype of a yellow-green leaf mutant to a 2.8-Mb chromosomal region. Furthermore, a proof-of-concept reverse genetics study revealed that mutations in gibberellic acid biosynthesis and signalling genes could be associated with negative impacts on plant height. Finally, we built a publically available database of these mutations with the corresponding germplasm (seed stock) repository to facilitate advanced functional genomics studies in wheat for the broad plant research community.
Keywords:wheat mutant  whole-exome sequencing  EMS  γ-rays  C-ion beams  functional genomics
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