Plant Communications (Sep 2022)

The genome and gene editing system of sea barleygrass provide a novel platform for cereal domestication and stress tolerance studies

  • Liuhui Kuang,
  • Qiufang Shen,
  • Liyang Chen,
  • Lingzhen Ye,
  • Tao Yan,
  • Zhong-Hua Chen,
  • Robbie Waugh,
  • Qi Li,
  • Lu Huang,
  • Shengguan Cai,
  • Liangbo Fu,
  • Pengwei Xing,
  • Kai Wang,
  • Jiari Shao,
  • Feibo Wu,
  • Lixi Jiang,
  • Dezhi Wu,
  • Guoping Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 5
p. 100333

Abstract

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The tribe Triticeae provides important staple cereal crops and contains elite wild species with wide genetic diversity and high tolerance to abiotic stresses. Sea barleygrass (Hordeum marinum Huds.), a wild Triticeae species, thrives in saline marshlands and is well known for its high tolerance to salinity and waterlogging. Here, a 3.82-Gb high-quality reference genome of sea barleygrass is assembled de novo, with 3.69 Gb (96.8%) of its sequences anchored onto seven chromosomes. In total, 41 045 high-confidence (HC) genes are annotated by homology, de novo prediction, and transcriptome analysis. Phylogenetics, non-synonymous/synonymous mutation ratios (Ka/Ks), and transcriptomic and functional analyses provide genetic evidence for the divergence in morphology and salt tolerance among sea barleygrass, barley, and wheat. The large variation in post-domestication genes (e.g. IPA1 and MOC1) may cause interspecies differences in plant morphology. The extremely high salt tolerance of sea barleygrass is mainly attributed to low Na+ uptake and root-to-shoot translocation, which are mainly controlled by SOS1, HKT, and NHX transporters. Agrobacterium-mediated transformation and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene editing systems were developed for sea barleygrass to promote its utilization for exploration and functional studies of hub genes and for the genetic improvement of cereal crops.

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