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Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression

Wheat is an important contributor to global food security, and further improvements are required to feed a growing human population. Functional genetics and genomics tools can help us to understand the function of different genes and to engineer beneficial changes. In this study, we used a promoter...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Junli, Xiong, Hongchun, Burguener, Germán F., Vasquez-Gross, Hans, Liu, Qiujie, Debernardi, Juan M., Akhunova, Alina, Garland-Campbell, Kimberly, Kianian, Shahryar F., Brown-Guedira, Gina, Pozniak, Curtis, Faris, Justin D., Akhunov, Eduard, Dubcovsky, Jorge
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37703281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2306494120
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author Zhang, Junli
Xiong, Hongchun
Burguener, Germán F.
Vasquez-Gross, Hans
Liu, Qiujie
Debernardi, Juan M.
Akhunova, Alina
Garland-Campbell, Kimberly
Kianian, Shahryar F.
Brown-Guedira, Gina
Pozniak, Curtis
Faris, Justin D.
Akhunov, Eduard
Dubcovsky, Jorge
author_facet Zhang, Junli
Xiong, Hongchun
Burguener, Germán F.
Vasquez-Gross, Hans
Liu, Qiujie
Debernardi, Juan M.
Akhunova, Alina
Garland-Campbell, Kimberly
Kianian, Shahryar F.
Brown-Guedira, Gina
Pozniak, Curtis
Faris, Justin D.
Akhunov, Eduard
Dubcovsky, Jorge
author_sort Zhang, Junli
collection PubMed
description Wheat is an important contributor to global food security, and further improvements are required to feed a growing human population. Functional genetics and genomics tools can help us to understand the function of different genes and to engineer beneficial changes. In this study, we used a promoter capture assay to sequence 2-kb regions upstream of all high-confidence annotated genes from 1,513 mutagenized plants from the tetraploid wheat variety Kronos. We identified 4.3 million induced mutations with an accuracy of 99.8%, resulting in a mutation density of 41.9 mutations per kb. We also remapped Kronos exome capture reads to Chinese Spring RefSeq v1.1, identified 4.7 million mutations, and predicted their effects on annotated genes. Using these predictions, we identified 59% more nonsynonymous substitutions and 49% more truncation mutations than in the original study. To show the biological value of the promoter dataset, we selected two mutations within the promoter of the VRN-A1 vernalization gene. Both mutations, located within transcription factor binding sites, significantly altered VRN-A1 expression, and one reduced the number of spikelets per spike. These publicly available sequenced mutant datasets provide rapid and inexpensive access to induced variation in the promoters and coding regions of most wheat genes. These mutations can be used to understand and modulate gene expression and phenotypes for both basic and commercial applications, where limited governmental regulations can facilitate deployment. These mutant collections, together with gene editing, provide valuable tools to accelerate functional genetic studies in this economically important crop.
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spelling pubmed-105151472023-09-23 Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression Zhang, Junli Xiong, Hongchun Burguener, Germán F. Vasquez-Gross, Hans Liu, Qiujie Debernardi, Juan M. Akhunova, Alina Garland-Campbell, Kimberly Kianian, Shahryar F. Brown-Guedira, Gina Pozniak, Curtis Faris, Justin D. Akhunov, Eduard Dubcovsky, Jorge Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Wheat is an important contributor to global food security, and further improvements are required to feed a growing human population. Functional genetics and genomics tools can help us to understand the function of different genes and to engineer beneficial changes. In this study, we used a promoter capture assay to sequence 2-kb regions upstream of all high-confidence annotated genes from 1,513 mutagenized plants from the tetraploid wheat variety Kronos. We identified 4.3 million induced mutations with an accuracy of 99.8%, resulting in a mutation density of 41.9 mutations per kb. We also remapped Kronos exome capture reads to Chinese Spring RefSeq v1.1, identified 4.7 million mutations, and predicted their effects on annotated genes. Using these predictions, we identified 59% more nonsynonymous substitutions and 49% more truncation mutations than in the original study. To show the biological value of the promoter dataset, we selected two mutations within the promoter of the VRN-A1 vernalization gene. Both mutations, located within transcription factor binding sites, significantly altered VRN-A1 expression, and one reduced the number of spikelets per spike. These publicly available sequenced mutant datasets provide rapid and inexpensive access to induced variation in the promoters and coding regions of most wheat genes. These mutations can be used to understand and modulate gene expression and phenotypes for both basic and commercial applications, where limited governmental regulations can facilitate deployment. These mutant collections, together with gene editing, provide valuable tools to accelerate functional genetic studies in this economically important crop. National Academy of Sciences 2023-09-13 2023-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10515147/ /pubmed/37703281 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2306494120 Text en Copyright © 2023 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Zhang, Junli
Xiong, Hongchun
Burguener, Germán F.
Vasquez-Gross, Hans
Liu, Qiujie
Debernardi, Juan M.
Akhunova, Alina
Garland-Campbell, Kimberly
Kianian, Shahryar F.
Brown-Guedira, Gina
Pozniak, Curtis
Faris, Justin D.
Akhunov, Eduard
Dubcovsky, Jorge
Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title_full Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title_fullStr Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title_full_unstemmed Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title_short Sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
title_sort sequencing 4.3 million mutations in wheat promoters to understand and modify gene expression
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37703281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2306494120
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