4.7 Article

Genomic features of meiotic crossovers in diploid potato

Journal

HORTICULTURE RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/hr/uhad079

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Meiotic recombination in potato was investigated by resequencing 2163 F-2 clones and identifying 41,945 crossovers. Recombination suppression in euchromatin regions and shared crossover hotspots were observed. The study found that crossovers mostly occurred in gene regions and were enriched with specific repeat sequences. The findings provide valuable insights for diploid potato breeding.
Meiotic recombination plays an important role in genome evolution and crop improvement. Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is the most important tuber crop in the world, but research about meiotic recombination in potato is limited. Here, we resequenced 2163 F-2 clones derived from five different genetic backgrounds and identified 41 945 meiotic crossovers. Some recombination suppression in euchromatin regions was associated with large structural variants. We also detected five shared crossover hotspots. The number of crossovers in each F-2 individual from the accession Upotato 1 varied from 9 to 27, with an average of 15.5, 78.25% of which were mapped within 5 kb of their presumed location. We show that 57.1% of the crossovers occurred in gene regions, with poly-A/T, poly-AG, AT-rich, and CCN repeats enriched in the crossover intervals. The recombination rate is positively related with gene density, SNP density, Class II transposon, and negatively related with GC density, repeat sequence density and Class I transposon. This study deepens our understanding of meiotic crossovers in potato and provides useful information for diploid potato breeding.

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