Frontiers in Plant Science (Apr 2022)

Wheat-Thinopyrum Substitution Lines Imprint Compensation Both From Recipients and Donors

  • Zhongfan Lyu,
  • Yongchao Hao,
  • Liyang Chen,
  • Shoushen Xu,
  • Hongjin Wang,
  • Mengyao Li,
  • Wenyang Ge,
  • Bingqian Hou,
  • Xinxin Cheng,
  • Xuefeng Li,
  • Naixiu Che,
  • Tianyue Zhen,
  • Silong Sun,
  • Yinguang Bao,
  • Zujun Yang,
  • Jizeng Jia,
  • Lingrang Kong,
  • Hongwei Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.837410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Even frequently used in wheat breeding, we still have an insufficient understanding of the biology of the products via distant hybridization. In this study, a transcriptomic analysis was performed for six Triticum aestivum-Thinopyrum elongatum substitution lines in comparison with the host plants. All the six disomic substitution lines showed much stronger “transcriptomic-shock” occurred on alien genomes with 57.43–69.22% genes changed expression level but less on the recipient genome (2.19–8.97%). Genome-wide suppression of alien genes along chromosomes was observed with a high proportion of downregulated genes (39.69–48.21%). Oppositely, the wheat recipient showed genome-wide compensation with more upregulated genes, occurring on all chromosomes but not limited to the homeologous groups. Moreover, strong co-upregulation of the orthologs between wheat and Thinopyrum sub-genomes was enriched in photosynthesis with predicted chloroplastic localization, which indicates that the compensation happened not only on wheat host genomes but also on alien genomes.

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