Annual wild soybean () is the ancestor of the cultivated soybean (). To reveal the genetic changes from to , an improved wild soybean chromosome segment substitution line (CSSL) population, , composed of 177 CSSLs with 182 SSR markers (SSR-map), was developed based on generated from ()×(). The was genotyped further through whole-genome resequencing, resulting in a physical map with 1366 SNPLDBs (SNP linkage-disequilibrium blocks), which are composed of more markers/segments, shorter marker length and more recombination breakpoints than the SSR-map and caused 721 new wild substituted segments. Using the SNPLDB-map, two loci co-segregating with seed-coat color (SCC) and six loci for days to flowering (DTF) with 88.02% phenotypic contribution were identified. Integrated with parental RNA-seq and DNA-resequencing, two SCC and six DTF candidate genes, including three previously cloned (, and ) and five newly detected ones, were predicted and verified at nucleotide mutant level, and then demonstrated with the consistency between gene-alleles and their phenotypes in . In total, six of the eight genes were identified with the parental allele-pairs coincided to those in 303 germplasm accessions, then were further demonstrated by the consistency between gene-alleles and germplasm phenotypes. Accordingly, the CSSL population integrated with parental DNA and RNA sequencing data was demonstrated to be an efficient platform in identifying candidate wild vs. cultivated gene-alleles.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7913812 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22041559 | DOI Listing |
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