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Deleterious Mutation Burden and Its Association with Complex Traits in Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor)

Version 4 2024-03-12, 19:03
Version 3 2023-10-29, 15:47
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 19:03 authored by Ravi ValluruRavi Valluru, Elodie E. Gazave, Edward S. Buckler, Nonoy Bandillo, Samuel B. Fernandes, John N. Ferguson, Roberto Lozano, Pradeep Hirannaiah, Tao Zuo, Patrick J. Brown, Andrew D. B. Leakey, Michael A. Gore

Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) is a major food cereal for millions of people worldwide. The sorghum genome, like other species, accumulates deleterious mutations, likely impacting its fitness. The lack of recombination, drift, and the coupling with favorable loci impede the removal of deleterious mutations from the genome by selection. To study how deleterious variants impact phenotypes, we identified putative deleterious mutations among ?5.5 M segregating variants of 229 diverse biomass sorghum lines. We provide the whole-genome estimate of the deleterious burden in sorghum, showing that ?33% of nonsynonymous substitutions are putatively deleterious. The pattern of mutation burden varies appreciably among racial groups. Across racial groups, the mutation burden correlated negatively with biomass, plant height, specific leaf area (SLA), and tissue starch content (TSC), suggesting that deleterious burden decreases trait fitness. Putatively deleterious variants explain roughly one-half of the genetic variance. However, there is only moderate improvement in total heritable variance explained for biomass (7.6%) and plant height (average of 3.1% across all stages). There is no advantage in total heritable variance for SLA and TSC. The contribution of putatively deleterious variants to phenotypic diversity therefore appears to be dependent on the genetic architecture of traits. Overall, these results suggest that incorporating putatively deleterious variants into genomic models slightly improves prediction accuracy because of extensive linkage. Knowledge of deleterious variants could be leveraged for sorghum breeding through either genome editing and/or conventional breeding that focuses on the selection of progeny with fewer deleterious alleles.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Institute for Agri-Food Technology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Genetics

Volume

211

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

1075-1087

Publisher

GSA

ISSN

0016-6731

eISSN

1943-2631

Date Submitted

2020-10-27

Date Accepted

2018-12-18

Date of First Publication

2019-03-01

Date of Final Publication

2019-03-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2020-10-21

ePrints ID

42749

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