High-quality genome assembly and resequencing of modern cotton cultivars provide resources for crop improvement

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Abstract

Cotton produces natural fiber for the textile industry. The genetic effects of genomic structural variations underlying agronomic traits remain unclear. Here, we generate two high-quality genomes of Gossypium hirsutum cv. NDM8 and Gossypium barbadense acc. Pima90, and identify large-scale structural variations in the two species and 1,081 G. hirsutum accessions. The density of structural variations is higher in the D-subgenome than in the A-subgenome, indicating that the D-subgenome undergoes stronger selection during species formation and variety development. Many structural variations in genes and/or regulatory regions potentially influencing agronomic traits were discovered. Of 446 significantly associated structural variations, those for fiber quality and Verticillium wilt resistance are located mainly in the D-subgenome and those for yield mainly in the A-subgenome. Our research provides insight into the role of structural variations in genotype-to-phenotype relationships and their potential utility in crop improvement.

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Ma, Z., Zhang, Y., Wu, L., Zhang, G., Sun, Z., Li, Z., … Wang, X. (2021). High-quality genome assembly and resequencing of modern cotton cultivars provide resources for crop improvement. Nature Genetics, 53(9), 1385–1391. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-021-00910-2

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