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result(s) for
"Londo, Jason"
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A super-pangenome of the North American wild grape species
by
Cochetel, Noé
,
Kasuga, Takao
,
Garrison, Erik
in
Adaptability
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Association analysis
2023
Background
Capturing the genetic diversity of wild relatives is crucial for improving crops because wild species are valuable sources of agronomic traits that are essential to enhance the sustainability and adaptability of domesticated cultivars. Genetic diversity across a genus can be captured in super-pangenomes, which provide a framework for interpreting genomic variations.
Results
Here we report the sequencing, assembly, and annotation of nine wild North American grape genomes, which are phased and scaffolded at chromosome scale. We generate a reference-unbiased super-pangenome using pairwise whole-genome alignment methods, revealing the extent of the genomic diversity among wild grape species from sequence to gene level. The pangenome graph captures genomic variation between haplotypes within a species and across the different species, and it accurately assesses the similarity of hybrids to their parents. The species selected to build the pangenome are a great representation of the genus, as illustrated by capturing known allelic variants in the sex-determining region and for Pierce’s disease resistance loci. Using pangenome-wide association analysis, we demonstrate the utility of the super-pangenome by effectively mapping short reads from genus-wide samples and identifying loci associated with salt tolerance in natural populations of grapes.
Conclusions
This study highlights how a reference-unbiased super-pangenome can reveal the genetic basis of adaptive traits from wild relatives and accelerate crop breeding research.
Journal Article
Genome Wide Transcriptional Profile Analysis of Vitis amurensis and Vitis vinifera in Response to Cold Stress
2013
Grape is one of the most important fruit crops worldwide. The suitable geographical locations and productivity of grapes are largely limited by temperature. Vitis amurensis is a wild grapevine species with remarkable cold-tolerance, exceeding that of Vitis vinifera, the dominant cultivated species of grapevine. However, the molecular mechanisms that contribute to the enhanced freezing tolerance of V. amurensis remain unknown. Here we used deep sequencing data from restriction endonuclease-generated cDNA fragments to evaluate the whole genome wide modification of transcriptome of V. amurensis under cold treatment. Vitis vinifera cv. Muscat of Hamburg was used as control to help investigate the distinctive features of V. amruensis in responding to cold stress. Approximately 9 million tags were sequenced from non-cold treatment (NCT) and cold treatment (CT) cDNA libraries in each species of grapevine sampled from shoot apices. Alignment of tags into V. vinifera cv. Pinot noir (PN40024) annotated genome identified over 15,000 transcripts in each library in V. amruensis and more than 16,000 in Muscat of Hamburg. Comparative analysis between NCT and CT libraries indicate that V. amurensis has fewer differential expressed genes (DEGs, 1314 transcripts) than Muscat of Hamburg (2307 transcripts) when exposed to cold stress. Common DEGs (408 transcripts) suggest that some genes provide fundamental roles during cold stress in grapes. The most robust DEGs (more than 20-fold change) also demonstrated significant differences between two kinds of grapevine, indicating that cold stress may trigger species specific pathways in V. amurensis. Functional categories of DEGs indicated that the proportion of up-regulated transcripts related to metabolism, transport, signal transduction and transcription were more abundant in V. amurensis. Several highly expressed transcripts that were found uniquely accumulated in V. amurensis are discussed in detail. This subset of unique candidate transcripts may contribute to the excellent cold-hardiness of V. amurensis.
Journal Article
Heterozygous Mapping Strategy (HetMappS) for High Resolution Genotyping-By-Sequencing Markers: A Case Study in Grapevine
by
Cadle-Davidson, Lance
,
Barba, Paola
,
Mitchell, Sharon E.
in
Alleles
,
Artificial chromosomes
,
Bioinformatics
2015
Genotyping by sequencing (GBS) provides opportunities to generate high-resolution genetic maps at a low genotyping cost, but for highly heterozygous species, missing data and heterozygote undercalling complicate the creation of GBS genetic maps. To overcome these issues, we developed a publicly available, modular approach called HetMappS, which functions independently of parental genotypes and corrects for genotyping errors associated with heterozygosity. For linkage group formation, HetMappS includes both a reference-guided synteny pipeline and a reference-independent de novo pipeline. The de novo pipeline can be utilized for under-characterized or high diversity families that lack an appropriate reference. We applied both HetMappS pipelines in five half-sib F1 families involving genetically diverse Vitis spp. Starting with at least 116,466 putative SNPs per family, the HetMappS pipelines identified 10,440 to 17,267 phased pseudo-testcross (Pt) markers and generated high-confidence maps. Pt marker density exceeded crossover resolution in all cases; up to 5,560 non-redundant markers were used to generate parental maps ranging from 1,047 cM to 1,696 cM. The number of markers used was strongly correlated with family size in both de novo and synteny maps (r = 0.92 and 0.91, respectively). Comparisons between allele and tag frequencies suggested that many markers were in tandem repeats and mapped as single loci, while markers in regions of more than two repeats were removed during map curation. Both pipelines generated similar genetic maps, and genetic order was strongly correlated with the reference genome physical order in all cases. Independently created genetic maps from shared parents exhibited nearly identical results. Flower sex was mapped in three families and correctly localized to the known sex locus in all cases. The HetMappS pipeline could have wide application for genetic mapping in highly heterozygous species, and its modularity provides opportunities to adapt portions of the pipeline to other family types, genotyping technologies or applications.
Journal Article
Multiple independent recombinations led to hermaphroditism in grapevine
by
Cadle-Davidson, Lance
,
Fennell, Anne
,
Londog, Jason P.
in
Biological Sciences
,
Boundaries
,
Cultivars
2021
Hermaphroditic (perfect) flowers were a key trait in grapevine domestication, enabling a drastic increase in yields due to the efficiency of self-pollination in the domesticated grapevine (Vitis
vinifera L. ssp. vinifera). In contrast, all extant wild Vitis species are dioecious, each plant having only male or female flowers. In this study, we identified the male (M) and female (f) haplotypes of the sex-determining region (SDR) in thewild grapevine species V. cinerea and confirmed the boundaries of the SDR. We also demonstrated that the SDR and its boundaries are precisely conserved across the Vitis genus using shotgun resequencing data of 556 wild and domesticated accessions from North America, East Asia, and Europe. A high linkage disequilibrium was found at the SDR in all wild grape species, while different recombination signatures were observed along the hermaphrodite (H) haplotype of 363 cultivated accessions, revealing two distinct H haplotypes, named H1 and H2. To further examine the H2 haplotype, we sequenced the genome of two grapevine cultivars, ’Riesling’ and ’Chardonnay’. By reconstructing the first two H2 haplotypes, we estimated the divergence time between H1 and H2 haplotypes at ∼6 million years ago, which predates the domestication of grapevine (∼8,000 y ago). Our findings emphasize the important role of recombination suppression in maintaining dioecy in wild grape species and lend additional support to the hypothesis that at least two independent recombination events led to the reversion to hermaphroditism in grapevine.
Journal Article
Evolutionary conservation of the grape sex-determining region in angiosperms and emergence of dioecy in Vitaceae
2025
In bunch grapes (
Vitis
spp.), flower sex is controlled by a ~ 200-kilobase sex-determining region (SDR) that contains genes involved in floral development. Here, we show that this region evolved from an ancient, highly conserved locus across angiosperms. Comparative genomic analysis of 56 plant genomes identifies homologous regions in all flowering plants but not in non-flowering lineages, suggesting a conserved role in floral function. Within the grape family (Vitaceae), we assemble and phase SDR haplotypes from six species, plus
Leea coccinea
as an outgroup, and find strong structural conservation, with size variation largely attributable to repetitive elements. Among the dioecious genera,
Vitis
and
Muscadinia
exhibit suppressed recombination in the SDR and share candidate sex-determining genes, whereas in
Tetrastigma
, the region appears to remain recombining, pointing to an alternative mechanism of sex determination. Altogether, our results suggest that dioecy emerged in grapes from a deeply conserved, collinear genomic region composed of multiple genes involved in floral development, morphology, and sexual fertility.
Domesticated grapevine produces hermaphroditic flowers, while other
Vitis
species are dioecious. The authors report that the
Vitis
sex-determining region contains flowering-related genes conserved across angiosperms and the
Vitaceae
, and propose a model for the evolution of dioecy in
Vitis
and
Muscadinia
.
Journal Article
Haplotyping the Vitis collinear core genome with rhAmpSeq improves marker transferability in a diverse genus
2020
Transferable DNA markers are essential for breeding and genetics. Grapevine (
Vitis
) breeders utilize disease resistance alleles from congeneric species ~20 million years divergent, but existing
Vitis
marker platforms have cross-species transfer rates as low as 2%. Here, we apply a marker strategy targeting the inferred
Vitis
core genome. Incorporating seven linked-read de novo assemblies and three existing assemblies, the
Vitis
collinear core genome is estimated to converge at 39.8 Mb (8.67% of the genome). Adding shotgun genome sequences from 40 accessions enables identification of conserved core PCR primer binding sites flanking polymorphic haplotypes with high information content. From these target regions, we develop 2,000 rhAmpSeq markers as a PCR multiplex and validate the panel in four biparental populations spanning the diversity of the
Vitis
genus, showing transferability increases to 91.9%. This marker development strategy should be widely applicable for genetic studies in many taxa, particularly those ~20 million years divergent.
Trait introgression requires universal markers, but cross-species transferability of current SNP markers can be as low as 2%. Here, the authors use an AmpSeq haplotype strategy targeting the collinear core genome for marker development and show transferability increases to 91.4% in the
Vitis
genus.
Journal Article
Genome-wide identification of WRKY family genes and their response to cold stress in Vitis vinifera
by
Zhu, Wei
,
Wang, Lina
,
Fang, Linchuan
in
Abiotic stress
,
Abscisic acid
,
Abscisic Acid - pharmacology
2014
Background
WRKY
transcription factors are one of the largest families of transcriptional regulators in plants.
WRKY
genes are not only found to play significant roles in biotic and abiotic stress response, but also regulate growth and development. Grapevine (
Vitis vinifera
) production is largely limited by stressful climate conditions such as cold stress and the role of
WRKY
genes in the survival of grapevine under these conditions remains unknown.
Results
We identified a total of 59
VvWRKYs
from the
V. vinifera
genome
,
belonging to four subgroups according to conserved WRKY domains and zinc-finger structure. The majority of
VvWRKYs
were expressed in more than one tissue among the 7 tissues examined which included young leaves, mature leaves, tendril, stem apex, root, young fruits and ripe fruits. Publicly available microarray data suggested that a subset of
VvWRKY
s was activated in response to diverse stresses. Quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) results demonstrated that the expression levels of 36
VvWRKY
s are changed following cold exposure. Comparative analysis was performed on data from publicly available microarray experiments, previous global transcriptome analysis studies, and qRT-PCR. We identified 15
VvWRKYs
in at least two of these databases which may relate to cold stress. Among them, the transcription of three genes can be induced by exogenous ABA application, suggesting that they can be involved in an ABA-dependent signaling pathway in response to cold stress.
Conclusions
We identified 59
VvWRKY
s from the
V. vinifera
genome and 15 of them showed cold stress-induced expression patterns. These genes represented candidate genes for future functional analysis of
VvWRKYs
involved in the low temperature-related signal pathways in grape.
Journal Article
Next Generation Mapping of Enological Traits in an F2 Interspecific Grapevine Hybrid Family
by
Fresnedo-Ramírez, Jonathan
,
Yang, Shanshan
,
Sacks, Gavin L.
in
Acids
,
Biodiversity
,
Bioinformatics
2016
In winegrapes (Vitis spp.), fruit quality traits such as berry color, total soluble solids content (SS), malic acid content (MA), and yeast assimilable nitrogen (YAN) affect fermentation or wine quality, and are important traits in selecting new hybrid winegrape cultivars. Given the high genetic diversity and heterozygosity of Vitis species and their tendency to exhibit inbreeding depression, linkage map construction and quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping has relied on F1 families with the use of simple sequence repeat (SSR) and other markers. This study presents the construction of a genetic map by single nucleotide polymorphisms identified through genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) technology in an F2 mapping family of 424 progeny derived from a cross between the wild species V. riparia Michx. and the interspecific hybrid winegrape cultivar, 'Seyval'. The resulting map has 1449 markers spanning 2424 cM in genetic length across 19 linkage groups, covering 95% of the genome with an average distance between markers of 1.67 cM. Compared to an SSR map previously developed for this F2 family, these results represent an improved map covering a greater portion of the genome with higher marker density. The accuracy of the map was validated using the well-studied trait berry color. QTL affecting YAN, MA and SS related traits were detected. A joint MA and SS QTL spans a region with candidate genes involved in the malate metabolism pathway. We present an analytical pipeline for calling intercross GBS markers and a high-density linkage map for a large F2 family of the highly heterozygous Vitis genus. This study serves as a model for further genetic investigations of the molecular basis of additional unique characters of North American hybrid wine cultivars and to enhance the breeding process by marker-assisted selection. The GBS protocols for identifying intercross markers developed in this study can be adapted for other heterozygous species.
Journal Article
Genetic regulation of leaf morphology in own-rooted and grafted vines of an F1 rootstock population
by
Londo, Jason P.
,
Alahakoon, Dilmini
,
Sharma, Prakriti
in
Biodiversity hot spots
,
Climatic conditions
,
Cultivars
2025
Understanding the genetic basis of leaf size and shape is essential for evaluating and selecting for plant adaptability and performance in variable and shifting climatic conditions. This study maps the leaf size and shape phenotypic variation as influenced by the genetic architecture of a rootstock population and its conferred influence on these traits in a common scion. The influence of the root system genotype was studied using two different presentations of an F1 rootstock population (F1_Vruprip; V. rupestris Scheele ‘B38’ (USDA PI#588160) X V. riparia Michx. ‘HP1’ (USDA PI#588271)); 1) the F1_Vruprip grapevine progeny on their own roots and 2) a F1_Vruprip cohort that was grafted with the common scion scion 'Marquette'. Three leaf positions (apical, middle, and basal) were sampled in both presentations at two timepoints in two consecutive growing seasons. A twenty-one-point leaf morphological landmark coordinate analysis was conducted, and ten leaf size and six derived shape phenotypes were used for QTL mapping. Genetic analysis identified five distinct hotspots associated with size-related leaf area attributes in own-rooted and grafted vines. The identification of multiple leaf-growth-associated pathways in these hotspot regions strengthened the correlation between genetics and phenotypic traits. Shape related QTL accounted for 12-48% of the shape phenotypic variation but did not cluster as QTL hotspots. Three QTL hotspots captured the genetic influence of the rootstock conferred onto the scion leaf area traits. The results showed that the leaf position and the rootstock population’s genetic composition significantly impacted leaf morphological attributes and that there was a measurable rootstock genotype influence conferred on the grafted scion leaves. This reveals the genetic loci and gene pathways underlying leaf morphological phenotypes in own-rooted progeny and also verifies the potential of rootstock genetics to confer modulation of scion canopy features, providing greater potential to select for climate-resilient grapevines.
Journal Article
Grapevine scion gene expression is driven by rootstock and environment interaction
2023
Background
Grafting is a horticultural practice used widely across woody perennial crop species to fuse together the root and shoot system of two distinct genotypes, the rootstock and the scion, combining beneficial traits from both. In grapevine, grafting is used in nearly 80% of all commercial vines to optimize fruit quality, regulate vine vigor, and enhance biotic and abiotic stress-tolerance. Rootstocks have been shown to modulate elemental composition, metabolomic profiles, and the shape of leaves in the scion, among other traits. However, it is currently unclear how rootstock genotypes influence shoot system gene expression as previous work has reported complex and often contradictory findings.
Results
In the present study, we examine the influence of grafting on scion gene expression in leaves and reproductive tissues of grapevines growing under field conditions for three years. We show that the influence from the rootstock genotype is highly tissue and time dependent, manifesting only in leaves, primarily during a single year of our three-year study. Further, the degree of rootstock influence on scion gene expression is driven by interactions with the local environment.
Conclusions
Our results demonstrate that the role of rootstock genotype in modulating scion gene expression is not a consistent, unchanging effect, but rather an effect that varies over time in relation to local environmental conditions.
Journal Article