Genomic co-localization of variation affecting agronomic and human gut microbiome traits in a meta-analysis of diverse sorghum

Author:

Korth Nate123ORCID,Yang Qinnan13ORCID,Van Haute Mallory J13,Tross Michael C24ORCID,Peng Bo13,Shrestha Nikee24,Zwiener-Malcom Mackenzie45,Mural Ravi V456,Schnable James C145,Benson Andrew K13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nebraska Food for Health Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE 68588 , USA

2. Complex Biosystems Graduate Program, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE 68588 , USA

3. Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE 68588 , USA

4. Center for Plant Science Innovation, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE 68588 , USA

5. Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE 68588 , USA

6. Department of Agronomy, Horticulture, and Plant Science, South Dakota State University , Brookings, SD 57007 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Substantial functional metabolic diversity exists within species of cultivated grain crops that directly or indirectly provide more than half of all calories consumed by humans around the globe. While such diversity is the molecular currency used for improving agronomic traits, diversity is poorly characterized for its effects on human nutrition and utilization by gut microbes. Moreover, we know little about agronomic traits’ potential tradeoffs and pleiotropic effects on human nutritional traits. Here, we applied a quantitative genetics approach using a meta-analysis and parallel genome-wide association studies of Sorghum bicolor traits describing changes in the composition and function of human gut microbe communities, and any of 200 sorghum seed and agronomic traits across a diverse sorghum population to identify associated genetic variants. A total of 15 multiple-effect loci (MEL) were initially found where different alleles in the sorghum genome produced changes in seed that affected the abundance of multiple bacterial taxa across 2 human microbiomes in automated in vitro fermentations. Next, parallel genome-wide studies conducted for seed, biochemical, and agronomic traits in the same population identified significant associations within the boundaries of 13/15 MEL for microbiome traits. In several instances, the colocalization of variation affecting gut microbiome and agronomic traits provided hypotheses for causal mechanisms through which variation could affect both agronomic traits and human gut microbes. This work demonstrates that genetic factors affecting agronomic traits in sorghum seed can also drive significant effects on human gut microbes, particularly bacterial taxa considered beneficial. Understanding these pleiotropic relationships will inform future strategies for crop improvement toward yield, sustainability, and human health.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Don Dillon Foundation

Hogemeyer Family Foundation

McConnel fund

USDA-ARS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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