학술논문

A common resequencing‐based genetic marker data set for global maize diversity.
Document Type
Article
Source
Plant Journal. Mar2023, Vol. 113 Issue 6, p1109-1121. 13p.
Subject
*GENETIC markers
*GENETIC variation
*NATURAL selection
*SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms
*CORN breeding
*GENE frequency
*CORN
Language
ISSN
0960-7412
Abstract
SUMMARY: Maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) populations exhibit vast ranges of genetic and phenotypic diversity. As sequencing costs have declined, an increasing number of projects have sought to measure genetic differences between and within maize populations using whole‐genome resequencing strategies, identifying millions of segregating single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and insertions/deletions (InDels). Unlike older genotyping strategies like microarrays and genotyping by sequencing, resequencing should, in principle, frequently identify and score common genetic variants. However, in practice, different projects frequently employ different analytical pipelines, often employ different reference genome assemblies and consistently filter for minor allele frequency within the study population. This constrains the potential to reuse and remix data on genetic diversity generated from different projects to address new biological questions in new ways. Here, we employ resequencing data from 1276 previously published maize samples and 239 newly resequenced maize samples to generate a single unified marker set of approximately 366 million segregating variants and approximately 46 million high‐confidence variants scored across crop wild relatives, landraces as well as tropical and temperate lines from different breeding eras. We demonstrate that the new variant set provides increased power to identify known causal flowering‐time genes using previously published trait data sets, as well as the potential to track changes in the frequency of functionally distinct alleles across the global distribution of modern maize. Significance Statement: Access to information on segregating genetic variants is necessary for many types of genetic investigation. Here we provide an extremely dense set of segregating genetic variants based on whole‐genome resequencing of 1,515 maize accessions from around the globe. This data set will accelerate the assignment of biological function to previously uncharacterized genes but the understanding of how both natural and artificial selection, as well as drift, have shaped the evolution of the maize genome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]