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Three founding ancestral genomes involved in the origin of sugarcane
Authors:Nicolas Pompidor  Carine Charron  Catherine Hervouet  Stphanie Bocs  Gaëtan Droc  Ronan Rivallan  Aurore Manez  Therese Mitros  Kankshita Swaminathan  Jean-Christophe Glaszmann  Olivier Garsmeur  Anglique D&#x;Hont
Institution:1. CIRAD, UMR AGAP, Montpellier, France;2. AGAP, Université de Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, Montpellier, France;3. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA;4. Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract:Background and AimsModern sugarcane cultivars (Saccharum spp.) are high polyploids, aneuploids (2n = ~12x = ~120) derived from interspecific hybridizations between the domesticated sweet species Saccharum officinarum and the wild species S. spontaneum.MethodsTo analyse the architecture and origin of such a complex genome, we analysed the sequences of all 12 hom(oe)ologous haplotypes (BAC clones) from two distinct genomic regions of a typical modern cultivar, as well as the corresponding sequence in Miscanthus sinense and Sorghum bicolor, and monitored their distribution among representatives of the Saccharum genus.Key ResultsThe diversity observed among haplotypes suggested the existence of three founding genomes (A, B, C) in modern cultivars, which diverged between 0.8 and 1.3 Mya. Two genomes (A, B) were contributed by S. officinarum; these were also found in its wild presumed ancestor S. robustum, and one genome (C) was contributed by S. spontaneum. These results suggest that S. officinarum and S. robustum are derived from interspecific hybridization between two unknown ancestors (A and B genomes). The A genome contributed most haplotypes (nine or ten) while the B and C genomes contributed one or two haplotypes in the regions analysed of this typical modern cultivar. Interspecific hybridizations likely involved accessions or gametes with distinct ploidy levels and/or were followed by a series of backcrosses with the A genome. The three founding genomes were found in all S. barberi, S. sinense and modern cultivars analysed. None of the analysed accessions contained only the A genome or the B genome, suggesting that representatives of these founding genomes remain to be discovered.ConclusionsThis evolutionary model, which combines interspecificity and high polyploidy, can explain the variable chromosome pairing affinity observed in Saccharum. It represents a major revision of the understanding of Saccharum diversity.
Keywords:Saccharum  sugarcane  polyploidy  hybridization  founding ancestral genome  diversity
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