22 research outputs found
Phylogeography of mtDNA haplogroup R7 in the Indian peninsula.
BACKGROUND: Human genetic diversity observed in Indian subcontinent is second only to that of Africa. This implies an early settlement and demographic growth soon after the first 'Out-of-Africa' dispersal of anatomically modern humans in Late Pleistocene. In contrast to this perspective, linguistic diversity in India has been thought to derive from more recent population movements and episodes of contact. With the exception of Dravidian, which origin and relatedness to other language phyla is obscure, all the language families in India can be linked to language families spoken in different regions of Eurasia. Mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosome evidence has supported largely local evolution of the genetic lineages of the majority of Dravidian and Indo-European speaking populations, but there is no consensus yet on the question of whether the Munda (Austro-Asiatic) speaking populations originated in India or derive from a relatively recent migration from further East. RESULTS: Here, we report the analysis of 35 novel complete mtDNA sequences from India which refine the structure of Indian-specific varieties of haplogroup R. Detailed analysis of haplogroup R7, coupled with a survey of approximately 12,000 mtDNAs from caste and tribal groups over the entire Indian subcontinent, reveals that one of its more recently derived branches (R7a1), is particularly frequent among Munda-speaking tribal groups. This branch is nested within diverse R7 lineages found among Dravidian and Indo-European speakers of India. We have inferred from this that a subset of Munda-speaking groups have acquired R7 relatively recently. Furthermore, we find that the distribution of R7a1 within the Munda-speakers is largely restricted to one of the sub-branches (Kherwari) of northern Munda languages. This evidence does not support the hypothesis that the Austro-Asiatic speakers are the primary source of the R7 variation. Statistical analyses suggest a significant correlation between genetic variation and geography, rather than between genes and languages. CONCLUSION: Our high-resolution phylogeographic study, involving diverse linguistic groups in India, suggests that the high frequency of mtDNA haplogroup R7 among Munda speaking populations of India can be explained best by gene flow from linguistically different populations of Indian subcontinent. The conclusion is based on the observation that among Indo-Europeans, and particularly in Dravidians, the haplogroup is, despite its lower frequency, phylogenetically more divergent, while among the Munda speakers only one sub-clade of R7, i.e. R7a1, can be observed. It is noteworthy that though R7 is autochthonous to India, and arises from the root of hg R, its distribution and phylogeography in India is not uniform. This suggests the more ancient establishment of an autochthonous matrilineal genetic structure, and that isolation in the Pleistocene, lineage loss through drift, and endogamy of prehistoric and historic groups have greatly inhibited genetic homogenization and geographical uniformity.RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/about/license which is similar to the 'Creative Commons Attribution Licence'. In brief you may : copy, distribute, and display the work; make derivative works; or make commercial use of the work - under the following conditions: the original author must be given credit; for any reuse or distribution, it must be made clear to others what the license terms of this work are
Cytogenetic analysis and mapping of leaf rust resistance in Aegilops speltoides Tausch derived bread wheat line “Selection 2427” carrying putative gametocidal gene(s)
Leaf rust (Puccinia triticina) is a major biotic stress affecting wheat yields worldwide. Host plant resistance is the best method for controlling leaf rust. Aegilops speltoides is a good source of resistance against wheat rusts. So far five Lr genes, Lr28, Lr35, Lr36, Lr47 and Lr51 have been transferred from Ae. speltoides to bread wheat. In Selection2427, a bread wheat introgresed line with Ae. speltoides as donor parent, a dominant gene for leaf rust resistance was mapped to the long arm of chromosome 3B (LrS2427). None of the Lr genes introgressed from Aegilops speltoides has been mapped to chromosome 3B. Since none of the designated seedling leaf rust resistance genes have been located on chromosome 3B, LrS2427 seems to be a novel gene. Sel.2427 showed a unique property typical of gametocidal genes that when crossed to other bread wheat cultivars the F1 showed partial pollen sterility as well as poor seed setting whilst Sel.2427 shows reasonable male and female fertility. Accidental co-transfer of gametocidal genes with LrS2427 may have occurred in Selection2427. Though LrS2427 did not show any segregation distortion and assorted independently of putative gametocidal gene(s), its utilization will be difficult due to the selfish behavior of gametocidal genes.The accepted manuscript in pdf format is listed with the files at the bottom of this page. The presentation of the authors' names and (or) special characters in the title of the manuscript may differ slightly between what is listed on this page and what is listed in the pdf file of the accepted manuscript; that in the pdf file of the accepted manuscript is what was submitted by the author
DataSheet_1_Leaf rolling in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is controlled by the upregulation of a pair of closely linked/duplicate zinc finger homeodomain class transcription factors during moisture stress conditions.docx
Zinc finger-homeodomain (ZF-HDs) class IV transcriptional factors (TFs) is a plant-specific transcription factor and play a key role in stress responses, plant growth, development, and hormonal signaling. In this study, two new leaf rolling TFs genes, namely TaZHD1 and TaZHD10, were identified in wheat using comparative genomic analysis of the target region that carried a major QTL for leaf rolling identified through multi-environment phenotyping and high throughput genotyping of a RIL population. Structural and functional annotation of the candidate ZHD genes with its closest rice orthologs reflects the species-specific evolution and, undoubtedly, validates the notions of remote-distance homology concept. Meanwhile, the morphological analysis resulted in contrasting difference for leaf rolling in extreme RILs between parental lines HD2012 and NI5439 at booting and heading stages. Transcriptome-wide expression profiling revealed that TaZHD10 transcripts showed significantly higher expression levels than TaZHD1 in all leaf tissues upon drought stress. The relative expression of these genes was further validated by qRT-PCR analysis, which also showed consistent results across the studied genotypes at the booting and anthesis stage. The contrasting modulation of these genes under drought conditions and the available evidenced for its epigenetic behavior that might involve the regulation of metabolic and gene regulatory networks. Prediction of miRNAs resulted in five Tae-miRs that could be associated with RNAi mediated control of TaZHD1 and TaZHD10 putatively involved in the metabolic pathway controlling rolled leaf phenotype. Gene interaction network analysis indicated that TaZHD1 and TaZHD10 showed pleiotropic effects and might also involve other functions in wheat in addition to leaf rolling. Overall, the results increase our understanding of TaZHD genes and provide valuable information as robust candidate genes for future functional genomics research aiming for the breeding of wheat varieties tolerant to leaf rolling.</p
Characterization and identification of sources of rust resistance in Triticum militinae derivatives
Abstract Triticum militinae (2n = 4X = 28, AtAtGG), belonging to the secondary gene pool of wheat, is known to carry resistance to many diseases. Though some disease resistance genes were reported from T. timopheevii, the closest wild relative of T. militinae, there are no reports from T. militinae. Twenty-one T. militinae Derivatives (TMD lines) developed at the Division of Genetics, IARI, New Delhi, were evaluated for leaf and stripe rusts at seedling and adult plant stages. Eight TMD lines (6–4, 6–5, 11–6, 12–4, 12–8, 12–12, 13–7 and 13–9) showed seedling resistance to both leaf and stripe rusts while six TMD lines (7–5, 7–6, 11–5, 13–1, 13–3 and 13–4) showed seedling resistance to leaf rust but adult plant resistance to stripe rust and three TMD lines (9–1, 9–2 and 15) showed seedling resistance to leaf rust but susceptibility to stripe rust. Three TMD lines (2–7, 2–8 and 6–1) with adult plant resistance to leaf and stripe rusts were found to carry the known gene Lr34/Yr18. Ten TMD lines (7–5, 7–6, 9–1, 9–2, 11–5, 11–6, 12–12, 12–4, 12–8, and 15) with seedling resistance to leaf rust, showing absence of known genes Lr18 and Lr50 with linked markers requires further confirmation by the test of allelism studies. As not a single stripe rust resistance gene has been reported from T. militinae or its close relative T. timpopheevii, all the 8 TMD lines (6–4, 6–5, 11–6,12–4, 12–8, 12–12, 13–7 and 13–9) identified of carrying seedling resistance to stripe rust and 3 TMD lines (13–1, 13–3 and 13–4) identified of carrying adult plant resistance to stripe rust are expected to carry unknown genes. Also, all the TMD lines were found to be cytologically stable and thus can be used in inheritance and mapping studies
Marker-Assisted Improvement of Bread Wheat Variety HD2967 for Leaf and Stripe Rust Resistance
The mega wheat variety HD2967 was improved for leaf and stripe rust resistance by marker-assisted backcross breeding. After its release in 2011, HD2967 became susceptible to stripe rust and moderately susceptible to leaf rust. The leaf rust resistance gene LrTrk was transferred into HD2967 from the durum wheat genotype Trinakria. Then, HD2967 was crossed with Trinakria to produce F1 plant foreground selection for LrTrk and background selection for the recurrent parent genotype was carried out in BC1F1, BC2F1 and BC2F2 generations. Foreground selection was carried out with the linked marker Xgwm234, while polymorphic SSR markers between parents were used for background selection. Background selection resulted in the rapid recovery of the recurrent parent genome. A morphological evaluation of 6 near isogenic lines (NILs)—2 resistant to leaf and stripe rust, and 4 resistant to leaf rust only—showed no significant differences in yields among NILs and the recurrent parent HD2967. All of the 6 NILs showed the presence of 2NS/2AS translocation, carrying the linked genes Lr37/Sr38/Yr17 present in HD2967 and the targeted leaf rust resistance gene LrTrk. Two NILs also showed additional resistance to stripe rust. Therefore, these NILs with rust resistance and an at par yielding ability of H2967 can replace the susceptible cultivar HD2967 to reduce yield losses due to disease
Image1_Genome-wide characterization and identification of cyclophilin genes associated with leaf rust resistance in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).TIF
Cyclophilins (CYPs) are a group of highly conserved proteins involved in host-pathogen interactions in diverse plant species. However, the role of CYPs during disease resistance in wheat remains largely elusive. In the present study, the systematic genome-wide survey revealed a set of 81 TaCYP genes from three subfamilies (GI, GII, and GIII) distributed on all 21 wheat chromosomes. The gene structures of TaCYP members were found to be highly variable, with 1–14 exons/introns and 15 conserved motifs. A network of miRNA targets with TaCYPs demonstrated that TaCYPs were targeted by multiple miRNAs and vice versa. Expression profiling was done in leaf rust susceptible Chinese spring (CS) and the CS-Ae. Umbellulata derived resistant IL “Transfer (TR). Three homoeologous TaCYP genes (TaCYP24, TaCYP31, and TaCYP36) showed high expression and three homoeologous TaCYP genes (TaCYP44, TaCYP49, and TaCYP54) showed low expression in TR relative to Chinese Spring. Most of the other TaCYPs showed comparable expression changes (down- or upregulation) in both contrasting TR and CS. Expression of 16 TaCYPs showed significant association (p < 0.05) with superoxide radical and hydrogen peroxide abundance, suggesting the role of TaCYPs in downstream signaling processes during wheat-leaf rust interaction. The differentially expressing TaCYPs may be potential targets for future validation using transgenic (overexpression, RNAi or CRISPR-CAS) approaches and for the development of leaf rust-resistant wheat genotypes.</p
Molecular and Morpho-Agronomical Characterization of Root Architecture at Seedling and Reproductive Stages for Drought Tolerance in Wheat
<div><p>Water availability is a major limiting factor for wheat (<i>Triticum aestivum</i> L.) production in rain-fed agricultural systems worldwide. Root architecture is important for water and nutrition acquisition for all crops, including wheat. A set of 158 diverse wheat genotypes of Australian (72) and Indian (86) origin were studied for morpho-agronomical traits in field under irrigated and drought stress conditions during 2010–11 and 2011-12.Out of these 31 Indian wheat genotypes comprising 28 hexaploid (<i>Triticum aestivum</i> L.) and 3 tetraploid (<i>T</i>. <i>durum</i>) were characterized for root traits at reproductive stage in polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipes. Roots of drought tolerant genotypes grew upto137cm (C306) as compared to sensitive one of 63cm with a mean value of 94.8cm. Root architecture traits of four drought tolerant (C306, HW2004, HD2888 and NI5439) and drought sensitive (HD2877, HD2012, HD2851 and MACS2496) genotypes were also observed at 6 and 9 days old seedling stage. The genotypes did not show any significant variation for root traits except for longer coleoptiles and shoot and higher absorptive surface area in drought tolerant genotypes. The visible evaluation of root images using WinRhizo Tron root scanner of drought tolerant genotype HW2004 indicated compact root system with longer depth while drought sensitive genotype HD2877 exhibited higher horizontal root spread and less depth at reproductive stage. Thirty SSR markers were used to study genetic variation which ranged from 0.12 to 0.77 with an average value of 0.57. The genotypes were categorized into three subgroups as highly tolerant, sensitive, moderately sensitive and tolerant as intermediate group based on UPGMA cluster, STRUCTURE and principal coordinate analyses. The genotypic clustering was positively correlated to grouping based on root and morpho-agronomical traits. The genetic variability identified in current study demonstrated these traits can be used to improve drought tolerance and association mapping.</p></div
Correlation between genetic similarity index and average taxonomic distance for root length per plant.
<p>The genotype pair and average taxonomic distance are represented by symbol (0).</p
Image4_Genome-wide characterization and identification of cyclophilin genes associated with leaf rust resistance in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).TIF
Cyclophilins (CYPs) are a group of highly conserved proteins involved in host-pathogen interactions in diverse plant species. However, the role of CYPs during disease resistance in wheat remains largely elusive. In the present study, the systematic genome-wide survey revealed a set of 81 TaCYP genes from three subfamilies (GI, GII, and GIII) distributed on all 21 wheat chromosomes. The gene structures of TaCYP members were found to be highly variable, with 1–14 exons/introns and 15 conserved motifs. A network of miRNA targets with TaCYPs demonstrated that TaCYPs were targeted by multiple miRNAs and vice versa. Expression profiling was done in leaf rust susceptible Chinese spring (CS) and the CS-Ae. Umbellulata derived resistant IL “Transfer (TR). Three homoeologous TaCYP genes (TaCYP24, TaCYP31, and TaCYP36) showed high expression and three homoeologous TaCYP genes (TaCYP44, TaCYP49, and TaCYP54) showed low expression in TR relative to Chinese Spring. Most of the other TaCYPs showed comparable expression changes (down- or upregulation) in both contrasting TR and CS. Expression of 16 TaCYPs showed significant association (p < 0.05) with superoxide radical and hydrogen peroxide abundance, suggesting the role of TaCYPs in downstream signaling processes during wheat-leaf rust interaction. The differentially expressing TaCYPs may be potential targets for future validation using transgenic (overexpression, RNAi or CRISPR-CAS) approaches and for the development of leaf rust-resistant wheat genotypes.</p