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Genome Relationships: The Grass Model in Current ResearchKatrien M. Devosa and Mike D. Galeaa John Innes Centre, Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom Correspondence to: Katrien M. Devos, katrien.devos{at}bbsrc.ac.uk (E-mail), 44-1603-450024 (fax)
Ten years ago, with the advent of comparative mapping, a new tool became available to plant geneticists. Comparative genome analyses demonstrated that gene orders among related plant species remained largely conserved over millions of years of evolution. This finding has revolutionized our thinking and formed the basis of a new sciencecomparative genomics. Since the first comparative mapping experiments, studies of genome relationships have included an ever wider range of plant species, and the focus has shifted from comparisons at the gross map level to studies of gene organization in small chromosomal regions and finally to the DNA sequence itself. To date, the most comprehensive data set comes from the grasses. The Poaceae family includes the staple cereals rice, maize, wheat, barley, sorghum, and the millets. For most of the past century, research has proceeded on each of these species individually. Mutants were produced, genetic maps were generated, and biochemical pathways were unraveled. Comparative genomics has provided the basis and stimulus to integrate this knowledge for application to all cereal crops. The realization of the power of a comparative approach has led to several plant genome initiatives and has promoted rice as a model for cereal crops. The rice genome, with only 400 million DNA base pairs (Mb), is the smallest among the major cereal crops and only approximately four times larger than that of the eudicot model plant Arabidopsis. Dense genetic maps, carrying some 2500 markers, have been constructed, and physical maps cover most of the genome. Additionally, large public collections of expressed sequence tags (ESTs) have become available, and it is clear that sequence data covering the entire rice genome will add a further vital dimension to comparative genomics in the near future. Views on the prospective applications of comparative genomics have developed as new insights have been gained into genome relationships and genome organization. At the same time, new opportunities have been envisaged and exploited. Below, we present an overview of the status of comparative genomics, with examples of ongoing research projects, focusing on wheat.
Beginning with a Map
Hexaploid Wheat
The Triticeae Tribe
A comparison of centromere positions allows us to infer the basic structure of the "ancestral" Triticeae chromosomes.
The Poaceae Family
Fig 2 depicts the genomes of foxtail millet (Setaria italica; 2n = 2x = 18; C = 0.45 pg) and pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum; 2n = 2x = 14; C = 2.4 pg), two species belonging to the Paniceae tribe within the Panicoideae subfamily, in relation to rice (Oryza sativa; 2n = 2x = 24; C = 0.4 pg). The highly similar arrangement of linkage blocks in foxtail millet and rice demonstrates that these genomes have undergone few rearrangements since their divergence. The pearl millet genome, on the other hand, is highly rearranged relative to rice. Many of these rearrangements are not present in any of the other Panicoideae analyzed to date. Therefore, they are likely to be specific either to pearl millet or to the genus Pennisetum. A few chromosomal rearrangements, however, can be identified that are likely to have occurred before the speciation of the Panicoideae but after the PanicoideaeOryzoideae divergence. Examples are the organization of rice linkage block 10, which is inserted into rice linkage block 3, and the insertion of rice linkage block 9 into 7 to form specific Panicoideae chromosomes (Fig 2). A different arrangement of rice linkage blocks, the insertion of linkage block 8 into 6 and linkage block 10 into 5, is present in wheat and oat and may characterize the Pooideae subfamily (
Some rearrangements may reflect more ancient evolutionary events. A particularly interesting observation is that regions duplicated on rice chromosome arms 11S and 12S (
To date, genome relationships have been established between rice, wild rice (Zizania palustris;
The comparative framework of molecular markers can be used for map-based prediction of the location of genes that determine key traits. Excellent examples are those genes controlling plant height that are insensitive to gibberellin application. In wheat, the Rht-1 genes are located on the short arms of chromosomes 4B and 4D, which correspond to the duplicated regions on maize chromosome arms 1L and 5S carrying the gibberellin-insensitive dwarfing genes D8 and D9. Isolation of Rht-1 and D8 has confirmed that the maize and wheat genes are indeed orthologous. In both cases, dwarf phenotypes were caused by mutations that altered the N-terminal region of the encoded proteins (
Although there are few cases in which the orthology of genes underlying traits of agronomic importance has been confirmed by sequence information, the mapping of traits to orthologous regions provides a reasonable degree of certainty as to the evolutionary descent of such genes. The domestication of crops, for instance, has involved the modification of one or more genes affecting seed dispersal, and seed shattering in foxtail millet has recently been ascribed to two major quantitative trait loci (QTL) on chromosomes V and IX (
Refining the Map: Megabase Resolution
Wheat (1C = 17 pg) has no small-genome relatives for which genetic data and tools are available. Therefore, the use of rice as a model has been investigated.
A similar comparative analysis at the megabase level was conducted between barley and rice in a search for the barley stem rust resistance gene Rpg1 (
It should again be noted that some of the observed rearrangements in gene order may pertain in particular to disease resistance genes. This conclusion was also inferred by a comparative analysis of the Adh1-Adh2 region of rice with maize. From 33 genes identified within a 350-kb stretch of rice genomic sequence, 13 were tested for their ability to cross-hybridize to maize. Four of these detected colinear orthologs on maize chromosome 4. Adh1 itself mapped to a nonsyntenic position on maize chromosome 1, providing further evidence that minor structural changes have occurred in most chromosomal regions after divergence from a common ancestor. Eight rice genes, including several disease-resistance gene homologs, however, failed to hybridize to maize genomic DNA, indicating either substantial sequence divergence or absence of these genes in maize (
From Rice to Arabidopsis
There are, of course, several problems associated with these analyses. BLAST algorithms, for example, are not impeccable in identifying true homologs, especially when given incomplete databases. The best BLAST correlation from a given search may represent an ortholog, or it may simply represent a member of a gene family. It may even identify a nonrelated gene that contains a similar sequence domain. Genes that contain a conserved MADS box domain, for example, may be otherwise unrelated ( Caution is needed in interpreting comparative data for genomes as divergent as those of rice and Arabidopsis. The degree of colinearity found largely depends on the stringency of the parameters used. More important than the issue of colinearity, however, is the utility of the relationship between Arabidopsis and rice for map-based gene prediction. Based on current data, "conserved colinearity" applies at best to only a few genes within syntenic Arabidopsisrice regions. Therefore, the prospect of scanning the Arabidopsis genome to find a gene for a trait of agronomic importance in monocot crop plants based on relative map position continues to be like searching for a needle in a haystack. Transferring markers that are tightly linked to and flank a key wheat gene to Arabidopsis is unlikely to delineate the Arabidopsis region carrying the candidate gene. Extrapolation between wheat and rice, on the other hand, entails a reasonable chance of success given the high level of conserved colinearity between their genomes. The sequencing of the entire rice genome is therefore crucial to investigations into the staple cereals in general.
Complications in Determining Synteny: Multigene Families and Chromosomal Duplications
Problems in distinguishing between orthologs, paralogs, and pseudogenes can also be encountered in comparisons of closely related species for which genome colinearity has been established through the cross-hybridization of conserved gene sequences. Only those probes that identify a single-copy gene for each of the genomes under investigation are likely to give unambiguous answers. Genes belonging to multigene families will often hybridize to many members of the gene family, but only those that display restriction fragment length polymorphism in the mapping population can be genetically mapped. When different members of a single family are mapped in different species, the impression is created that colinearity is disrupted. For example, all probes that detected noncolinear loci in a comparative study between the barley and A. tauschii genomes were multicopy in one or both of the species (
Segmental chromosome duplications also may confound relationships. In diploid rice, duplications have been identified between rice chromosome arms 11S and 12S (
Species with large genomes, such as the Triticeae cereals, have long been deemed unamenable to gene isolation by map-based methods. More than 80% of the wheat and barley genomes consist of highly repetitive DNA, which may cause problems in the construction as well as analysis of large insert libraries. YACs containing repeats are often unstable, and isolation of single-copy YAC end or subclones suitable for chromosome walking is difficult (
Recent advances in the construction of large insert libraries, particularly in the development of BAC vectors, which have largely replaced YACs, and the availability of enhanced robotics capability have made the construction and maintenance of stable libraries of the entire wheat genome feasible. Currently, BAC libraries are available for several Triticeae species, including T. monococcum (
Physical mapping of molecular markers using a series of wheat deletion lines had demonstrated the existence of gene-rich regions in the wheat genome, indicating that genes were not randomly distributed (
Analysis of 60 kb of contiguous sequence around the Mlo gene in barley showed the presence of three genes, which made up 11.7% of the region. Interestingly, only a single retrotransposon was found, accounting for 24% of the region (
Sequence data from plant species with large genomes are still very limited. All available data suggest that genes in wheat and barley are clustered within the genome. If these gene islands can be targeted, then direct gene isolation should be greatly facilitated. The current approach for gene isolation is to identify molecular markers that are tightly linked to a target trait in large populations (1000 to 10,000 plants). Markers tightly linked to and flanking the gene are then used to identify BAC or YAC clones spanning the gene. With gene densities of approximately one gene per 20 kb, it should be feasible to have both flanking markers located on a BAC contig of a few hundred kilobases, if not within a single BAC clone (
Over the years, there has been a shift in our approach to analyzing large genomes. Fifteen years ago, large genomes were considered essentially intractable. This view has changed during the 1990s with the development of comparative genetics. The high degree of conservation of gene content and order between species within taxonomic groups allowed the use of species with smaller genomes as models for crop traits. Now, at the turn of the century, scientists are faced with another dilemma. As more data become available, it is clear that the efficiency with which model organisms can be employed will depend on our knowledge of the trait itself and the genome region carrying the gene. It is thus pertinent to ask whether the exploitation of conserved colinear relationships is the best approach to crop plant research or whether we should focus research on the crop plant genomes themselves. The recent advances in technology and our knowledge of the structural organization of crop genomes definitely make the latter option feasible, as exemplified by the isolation of the barley Mlo gene. On the other hand, the isolation of the wheat Rht1 dwarfing genes, using the Arabidopsis gene GAI, underlines the contribution that model species can make to crop plant research. Whatever route is taken, comparative genomics will continue to play a major role. The sequencing of the entire rice genome and selected regions of other crop genomes will provide a ready pool of candidate genes relevant to both agronomic and evolutionary considerations of grass genomes. It is important, however, that the progress in genome research be paralleled by developments in trait mapping and bioinformatics. Maximum exploitation of the vast pool of genome data will only be possible when suitable management systems and search and display tools are available.
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