Frontiers in Plant Science (Sep 2021)

Multiple Wheat Genomes Reveal Novel Gli-2 Sublocus Location and Variation of Celiac Disease Epitopes in Duplicated α-Gliadin Genes

  • Gwyneth Halstead-Nussloch,
  • Tsuyoshi Tanaka,
  • Tsuyoshi Tanaka,
  • Dario Copetti,
  • Dario Copetti,
  • Timothy Paape,
  • Timothy Paape,
  • Fuminori Kobayashi,
  • Masaomi Hatakeyama,
  • Masaomi Hatakeyama,
  • Hiroyuki Kanamori,
  • Jianzhong Wu,
  • Martin Mascher,
  • Martin Mascher,
  • Kanako Kawaura,
  • Kentaro K. Shimizu,
  • Kentaro K. Shimizu,
  • Hirokazu Handa,
  • Hirokazu Handa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.715985
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The seed protein α-gliadin is a major component of wheat flour and causes gluten-related diseases. However, due to the complexity of this multigene family with a genome structure composed of dozens of copies derived from tandem and genome duplications, little was known about the variation between accessions, and thus little effort has been made to explicitly target α-gliadin for bread wheat breeding. Here, we analyzed genomic variation in α-gliadins across 11 recently published chromosome-scale assemblies of hexaploid wheat, with validation using long-read data. We unexpectedly found that the Gli-B2 locus is not a single contiguous locus but is composed of two subloci, suggesting the possibility of recombination between the two during breeding. We confirmed that the number of immunogenic epitopes among 11 accessions varied. The D subgenome of a European spelt line also contained epitopes, in agreement with its hybridization history. Evolutionary analysis identified amino acid sites under diversifying selection, suggesting their functional importance. The analysis opens the way for improved grain quality and safety through wheat breeding.

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