Affiliation:
1. United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Western Regional Research Center, Albany, California 94710
2. Laboratory of Genome Organization, Unité de Recherches en Génomique Végétale (URGV-INRA), 91057 Evry Cedex, France and
3. UMR INRA-UBP ASP Amélioration et Santé des Plantes, 63039 Clermont Ferrand, France
Abstract
Abstract
The Glu-1 locus, encoding the high-molecular-weight glutenin protein subunits, controls bread-making quality in hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum) and represents a recently evolved region unique to Triticeae genomes. To understand the molecular evolution of this locus region, three orthologous Glu-1 regions from the three subgenomes of a single hexaploid wheat species were sequenced, totaling 729 kb of sequence. Comparing each Glu-1 region with its corresponding homologous region from the D genome of diploid wheat, Aegilops tauschii, and the A and B genomes of tetraploid wheat, Triticum turgidum, revealed that, in addition to the conservation of microsynteny in the genic regions, sequences in the intergenic regions, composed of blocks of nested retroelements, are also generally conserved, although a few nonshared retroelements that differentiate the homologous Glu-1 regions were detected in each pair of the A and D genomes. Analysis of the indel frequency and the rate of nucleotide substitution, which represent the most frequent types of sequence changes in the Glu-1 regions, demonstrated that the two A genomes are significantly more divergent than the two B genomes, further supporting the hypothesis that hexaploid wheat may have more than one tetraploid ancestor.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
80 articles.
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