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Resequencing of 296 cultivated and wild lotus accessions unravels its evolution and breeding history

  • Zhengwei Liu
  • , Honglian Zhu
  • , Juhong Zhou
  • , Sanjie Jiang
  • , Yun Wang
  • , Jing Kuang
  • , Qun Ji
  • , Jing Peng
  • , Jie Wang
  • , Li Gao
  • , Mingzhou Bai
  • , Jianbo Jian*
  • , Weidong Ke*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

37 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Lotus (family: Nelumbonaceae) are perennial aquatic plants that represent one of the most ancient basal dicots. In the present study, we resequenced 296 lotus accessions from various geographical locations and germplasms to explore their genomic diversity and population structure. This germplasm set consisted of four accessions of American wild lotus and 292 accessions of Asian lotus, which were divided into four subgroups: wild, rhizome, flower and seed. Total single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) suggested that the wild lotus had the highest variant number (7 191 010). Population structure and genome diversity analysis indicated that the American wild lotus demonstrated a distant genetic relationship with the Asian lotus. Furthermore, the seed and rhizome lotus groups had not originated from a single source but rather had a more complex multisource origin. Besides that, the seed lotus showed higher genetic diversity, which might have been due to the gene flow from the flower lotus to seed lotus by artificial crossing, and the rhizome lotus showed a much lower genetic diversity than the other groups. The present study provides SNP markers for lotus genomic diversity analysis, which will be useful for guiding lotus breeding.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1673-1684
Number of pages12
JournalPlant Journal
Volume104
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2020

User-Defined Keywords

  • lotus
  • genome resequencing
  • population analysis

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