26 research outputs found
Paleogenomic Analysis of the Short Arm of Chromosome 3 Reveals the History of the African and Asian Progenitors of Cultivated Rices
Rice is one of the most important crops, feeding more than half of the world
population. There are two cultivated species, the African rice Oryza
glaberrima and the Asian rice O. sativa. Although
the African species is gradually replaced by O. sativa in most
of African rice agrosystems, this species represents an important reservoir of
genes of agronomical interest. Their exploitation for the development of modern
African rice varieties requires a good understanding of the genetic
relationships between the two cultivated species. We took advantage of the
recent availability of the sequence of the chromosome 3 short arm of O.
glaberrima to estimate the date of radiation between O.
glaberrima and O. sativa lineages, using all the
long terminal repeat (LTR)-retrotransposons as paleogenomic markers. We first
demonstrated that in two distinct lineages, LTR-retrotransposons mutate at the
same rate. Based on LTR-retrotransposons shared by both species in orthologous
position, we then estimated that O. glaberrima and O.
sativa progenitors diverged 1.2 Ma. This constitutes one of the
first studies using such a large sample of transposable elements to reconstruct
the phylogeny of species. Given the number of genome sequencing projects, there
is no doubt that such approach will allow to resolve phylogenetic incongruities.
The application of this method to other plant genomes will also facilitate
further understanding of evolution of LTR-retrotransposons and eventually of the
whole genome in divergent plant lineages