Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/947
Title: The genome sequence of segmental allotetraploid peanut Arachis hypogaea
Authors: Bertioli, David J.
Jenkins, Jerry
Clevenger, Josh
Dudchenko, Olga
Gao, Dongying
Seijo, Guillermo
Leal-Bertioli, Soraya C. M.
Ren, Longhui
Farmer, Andrew D.
Pandey, Manish K.
Samoluk, Sergio S.
Abernathy, Brian
Agarwal, Gaurav
Ballén-Taborda, Carolina
Cameron, Connor
Campbell , Jacqueline
Chavarro, Carolina
Chitikineni, Annapurna
Chu, Ye
Dash, Sudhansu
Baidouri, Moaine El
Guo, Baozhu
Huang, Wei
Kim, Kyung Do
Korani, Walid
Lanciano, Sophie
Lui, Christopher G.
Mirouze, Marie
Moretzsohn, Márcio C.
Pham, Melanie
Shin, Jin Hee
Shirasawa, Kenta
Sinharoy, Senjuti
Sreedasyam, Avinash
Weeks, Nathan T.
Zhang, Xinyou
Zheng, Zheng
Sun, Ziqi
Froenicke, Lutz
Aiden, Erez L.
Michelmore, Richard
Varshney, Rajeev K.
Holbrook, C. Corley
Cannon, Ethalinda K. S.
Scheffler, Brian E.
Grimwood, Jane
Ozias-Akins, Peggy
Cannon, Steven B.
Jackson, Scott A.
Schmutz , Jeremy
Keywords: Genomics
Plant genetics
Arachis hypogaea
peanut
segmental allotetraploid
genome sequence
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Springer Nature Publishing AG
Citation: Nature Genetics, 51(5): 877-884
Abstract: Like many other crops, the cultivated peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is of hybrid origin and has a polyploid genome that contains essentially complete sets of chromosomes from two ancestral species. Here we report the genome sequence of peanut and show that after its polyploid origin, the genome has evolved through mobile-element activity, deletions and by the flow of genetic information between corresponding ancestral chromosomes (that is, homeologous recombination). Uniformity of patterns of homeologous recombination at the ends of chromosomes favors a single origin for cultivated peanut and its wild counterpart A. monticola. However, through much of the genome, homeologous recombination has created diversity. Using new polyploid hybrids made from the ancestral species, we show how this can generate phenotypic changes such as spontaneous changes in the color of the flowers. We suggest that diversity generated by these genetic mechanisms helped to favor the domestication of the polyploid A. hypogaea over other diploid Arachis species cultivated by humans.
Description: Accepted date: 28 March 2019
URI: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/947
ISSN: 1546-1718
Appears in Collections:Institutional Publications

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