Author:
Chen Xuan,Guo Hong-Yan,Zhang Qing-Ying,Wang Lu,Guo Rong,Zhan Yi-Xun,Lv Pin,Xu Yan-Ping,Guo Meng-Bi,Zhang Yuan,Zhang Kun,Liu Yan-Hu,Yang Ming
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cannabis is an important industrial crop species whose fibre, seeds, flowers and leaves are widely used by humans. The study of cannabinoids extracted from plants has been popular research topic in recent years. China is one of the origins of cannabis and one of the few countries with wild cannabis plants. However, the genetic structure of Chinese cannabis and the degree of adaptive selection remain unclear.
Results
The main morphological characteristics of wild cannabis in China were assessed. Based on whole-genome resequencing SNPs, Chinese cannabis could be divided into five groups in terms of geographical source and ecotype: wild accessions growing in the northwestern region; wild accessions growing in the northeastern region; cultivated accessions grown for fibre in the northeastern region; cultivated accessions grown for seed in northwestern region, and cultivated accessions in southwestern region. We further identified genes related to flowering time, seed germination, seed size, embryogenesis, growth, and stress responses selected during the process of cannabis domestication. The expression of flowering-related genes under long-day (LD) and short-day (SD) conditions showed that Chinese cultivated cannabis is adapted to different photoperiods through the regulation of Flowering locus T-like (FT-like) expression.
Conclusion
This study clarifies the genetic structure of Chinese cannabis and offers valuable genomic resources for cannabis breeding.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
7 articles.
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