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A genome resource for green millet Setaria viridis enables discovery of agronomically valuable loci

Published in:

Nat Biotechnol 38(10) , 1203-1210 (Oct 2020)

Author(s):

Mamidi, S., Healey, A., Huang, P., Grimwood, J., Jenkins, J., Barry, K., Sreedasyam, A., Shu, S., Lovell, J. T., Feldman, M., Wu, J., Yu, Y., Chen, C., Johnson, J., Sakakibara, H., Kiba, T., Sakurai, T., Tavares, R., Nusinow, D. A., Baxter, I., Schmutz, J., Brutnell, T. P., Kellogg, E. A.

DOI:

10.1038/s41587-020-0681-2

Abstract:

Wild and weedy relatives of domesticated crops harbor genetic variants that can advance agricultural biotechnology. Here we provide a genome resource for the wild plant green millet (Setaria viridis), a model species for studies of C4 grasses, and use the resource to probe domestication genes in the close crop relative foxtail millet (Setaria italica). We produced a platinum-quality genome assembly of S. viridis and de novo assemblies for 598 wild accessions and exploited these assemblies to identify loci underlying three traits: response to climate, a ‘loss of shattering’ trait that permits mechanical harvest and leaf angle, a predictor of yield in many grass crops. With CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing, we validated Less Shattering1 (SvLes1) as a gene whose product controls seed shattering. In S. italica, this gene was rendered nonfunctional by a retrotransposon insertion in the domesticated loss-of-shattering allele SiLes1-TE (transposable element). This resource will enhance the utility of S. viridis for dissection of complex traits and biotechnological improvement of panicoid crops.

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