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Genetics, Vol. 177, 597-606, September 2007, Copyright © 2007
doi:10.1534/genetics.107.075515
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* Plant Genetics and Breeding Department, Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, Aberystwyth, SY23 3EB, United Kingdom and
Vialactia Biosciences, Auckland 1031, New Zealand
1 Corresponding author: Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, Plas Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 3EB, United Kingdom.
E-mail: julie.king{at}bbsrc.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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Irrespective of the <100% syntenic relationship between the monocots, the rice genome provides a very powerful tool for predicting the gene content and order in species with large and hence difficult to sequence genomes, such as grass (e.g., Lolium and Festuca species), wheat, barley, and oats, at the macrosyntenic level.
Previous comparative mapping analyses in large monocot genomes have been undertaken via genetic mapping or bin mapping of orthologous markers since full-genome sequencing of these species is not presently viable. Both methods have been used successfully (VAN DEYNZE et al. 1995, 1998; SORRELLS et al. 2003; PENG et al. 2004; QI et al. 2004). The major limitations with genetic mapping are: (1) it is difficult and time consuming to map large numbers (thousands) of orthologous markers in sufficiently large mapping populations to enable high-resolution comparative analyses; (2) genetic mapping gives no indication of the physical distances between genes, which is of key importance for positional cloning; and (3) the requirement for polymorphism limits or prevents the mapping of some markers. Bin mapping allows the relatively fast mapping of large numbers of markers as has been demonstrated in wheat (LAZO et al. 2004; QI et al. 2004). This system relies on large chromosomal deletions that divide the chromosomes into physically demarcated intervals or bins into which markers can be placed. A limitation of wheat bin mapping is the low resolution of the system; i.e., the number of bins into which each chromosome is divided is small; e.g., chromosome 3A is composed of only six bins (MUNKVOLD et al. 2004). In addition, multiple chromosomal deletions frequently complicate deletion-bin mapping (QI et al. 2003).
The data obtained from genetic mapping and deletion-bin mapping have indicated that large numbers of coding sequences in the monocots studied are located in gene-rich regions that undergo high frequencies of recombination. In wheat, for example, the deletion-bin mapping of 16,000 expressed sequence tag loci (ESTs) found that of 23 bins with higher gene densities, all but 1 were located in the distal 40% of the chromosome arm (QI et al. 2004). Relatively few genes are thought to be located in proximal recombination-poor regions of the chromosomes (e.g., ERAYMAN et al. 2004; QI et al. 2004).
The Lolium/Festuca introgression system provides an alternative method of comparative mapping, similar to wheat deletion mapping but with potentially far greater resolution (KING et al. 2002a,b). The Lolium/Festuca introgression system is based on a series of seven monosomic substitution lines. In each of these seven lines one of the chromosomes of Lolium perenne (2n = 2x = 14; DNA content = 2034 Mbp; BENNETT and SMITH 1976) has been replaced by its homeologous equivalent from Festuca pratensis (2n = 2x = 14; DNA content = 2181 Mbp; BENNETT et al. 1982). The F. pratensis chromosome is then broken into different-sized segments in a BC2 mapping population through recombination with the homeologous L. perenne chromosome. The ability to distinguish the chromosomes of Lolium and Festuca using genomic in situ hybridization (GISH), coupled with the high frequency of recombination between the chromosomes of Lolium and Festuca (KING et al. 1998, 1999), enables the identification and characterization of individuals that carry different-size Festuca chromosome segments. For example, an introgression map of L. perenne/F. pratensis chromosome 3, homeologous to rice chromosome 1, has been generated. The introgression map is composed of 16 individuals, each of which carry different-size Festuca chromosome segments. Alignment of overlapping Festuca chromosome segments effectively divides L. perenne/F. pratensis chromosome 3 up into 18 physically demarcated bins. Screening the individuals that make up the introgression map of Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 for the presence or the absence of Festuca polymorphisms allows genetic markers, e.g., restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLPs), simple sequence repeats (SSRs), and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), to be assigned to one of the 18 introgression bins (KING et al. 2002a,b).
A critical factor, in addition to comparative analysis, for map-based cloning and also for the development of efficient plant breeding strategies is knowledge of how recombination frequency and distribution relate to gene distribution throughout the genome. For example, the development of new plant varieties depends on the ability to assemble specific allelic combinations of genes that give rise to superior genotypes. This process requires the hybridization of specific parental material carrying target alleles. Recombination during meiosis leads, via reassortment, to the generation of individuals carrying the different combinations of alleles upon which the breeder can make selections. The ability to assemble specific allelic combinations is, however, completely dependent on the frequency and distribution of recombination. For example, it is relatively easy to select for specific allelic combinations and select against linked deleterious alleles located in regions of the genome that show high frequencies of recombination. In contrast, it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to select for specific allelic combinations and to break linkages with deleterious alleles present in regions of the genome that show little or no recombination. Similarly a sufficiently high frequency of recombination is required for the isolation of genes via map-based cloning strategies such as chromosome landing; i.e., genes located in an area of high recombination will be relatively easy to isolate while genes located in regions of the genome with low recombination will be difficult if not impossible to isolate.
Here we describe the exploitation of the published rice genome sequence to bin map sequences from functionally annotated gene models on approximately every 5th to 10th BAC/PAC clone from rice chromosome 1 to the Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 introgression map to (1) further elucidate the syntenic relationship between rice and the large-genome monocots, (2) determine the physical location of rice chromosome 1 genes in large-genome monocots, and (3) determine the relationship between gene distribution and recombination in large-genome crop species.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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DNA extraction, PCR, and clean up:
Genomic DNA was extracted using an AutoGen 740 (AutoGen, Holliston, MA).
All PCR amplifications carried out in this work were performed using Faststart Taq DNA polymerase and the manufacturer's buffer systems (Roche, Lewes, UK) in ABI9700 thermocyclers (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, UK). Thermal cycling was performed beginning with 5 min at 96°; followed by 10 cycles of 1 min at 95°, 1 min at 60° (with the temperature reduced by 0.5° per cycle), 3 min at 72°; followed by 30 cycles of 1 min at 95°, 1 min at 55°, and 3 min at 72°; and a final extension step of 7 min at 72°. For a small number of primers the initial annealing temperature was 55°, dropping to 50° over the course of the first 10 cycles.
DNA was cleaned either directly from the PCR amplification using the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (QIAGEN, Crawley, UK) or from an agarose gel using the QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (QIAGEN).
Development and introgression mapping of SNPs:
Strategy:
Primer design:
Primers were developed from sequence from approximately every 5th to 10th BAC/PAC clone from rice linkage group 1 on the basis of the following three strategies:
Rice genome sequence was obtained from The Institute for Genomic Research (http://www.tigr.org/tdb/e2k1/osa1/pseudomolecules/info.shtml).
Blastn searches against all monocot ESTs and cDNAs were carried out via Plant GDB blastn search (http://www.plantgdb.org/PlantGDB-cgi/blast/PlantGDBblast).
Alignment of the GeneThresher database with the rice genome sequence was carried out through GRAMENE (http://www.gramene.org/Oryza_sativa/).
SNP discovery (detection of polymorphism between Lolium and Festuca group 3 chromosomes):
All primers were initially tested by the PCR amplification of genomic DNA from the plants involved in the production of the chromosome 3 monosomic substitution [F. pratensis, L. perenne (diploid), and L. perenne (tetraploid)] (KING et al. 1998), the L. perenne/L. perenne/F. pratensis triploid hybrid, and the group 3 substitution line itself with the amplification products run on a 1% agarose gel.
Primers that produced no amplification products in F. pratensis or F. pratensis amplification products that did not appear in either the triploid hybrid or chromosome 3 substitution when run on the agarose gel were discarded.
Primers producing a single amplification product in each of the five genotypes listed above and that showed no differences in running speed on agarose gels were re-PCRed and the products cleaned and sequenced.
Primers producing more than one band when run on the agarose gel had the correct size band (estimated from the rice sequence) cut from the gel. The DNA was then cleaned and sequenced.
Sequencing was carried out on an ABI 3100 (Applied Biosystems). The sequences obtained for the five genotypes were aligned using Genedoc (http://www.psc.edu/biomed/genedoc). The aligned sequences were then checked for the presence of single-nucleotide polymorphisms between the parental F. pratensis genotype and the two L. perenne genotypes. The presence of SNP markers located in the Lolium and Festuca group 3 chromosomes was confirmed by their presence in the sequences of the triploid hybrid and group 3 substitution.
Introgression mapping of group 3 SNP markers:
Having established the presence of a SNP between F. pratensis and L. perenne group 3 chromosomes the primers were then used to amplify genomic DNA of the 16 genotypes composing the Festuca introgression map. Screening for the presence or the absence of the F. pratensis and L. perenne bases in each of the 16 genotypes carrying different-sized and overlapping Festuca chromosome segments allowed each SNP, derived from rice linkage group 1 BAC/PAC clones, to be assigned to a bin on the Festuca introgression map. The sequence data from F. pratensis was blastn searched back against the rice genome to confirm that the products amplified in the Lolium and Festuca genotypes were orthologous to the original sequence obtained from rice.
In addition to the above procedure a modified procedure was applied for some primers designed across introns. These primers occasionally produced amplification products in the five genotypes [F. pratensis, L. perenne (diploid and tetraploid), L. perenne/L. perenne/F. pratensis triploid hybrid, and the group 3 substitution] that showed differences in running speed on agarose gels. DNA containing a heteroduplex of F. pratensis and L. perenne DNA, i.e., the triploid hybrid and the substitution line, showed retardation in the running speed compared to DNA from only one species. The lag in running speed was presumably due to imperfectly paired DNA, i.e., the presence of loops, etc., within the heteroduplex. The retardation was also observed when heteroduplex DNA was amplified in one or more of the 16 genotypes composing the Lolium/Festuca introgression map. It was therefore possible to physically locate the polymorphism (and hence the rice BAC/PAC clone on which it was located) to its correct bin on the Lolium/Festuca map. The amplified F. pratensis product was sequenced and the sequences blastn searched back against the rice genome to confirm amplification of the correct product.
| RESULTS |
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Syntenic relationship between rice and the grasses:
We bin mapped sequences from 69 BAC/PAC clones from rice chromosome 1 onto the Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 introgression map, 67 of which were mapped using primers designed from sequence within functionally annotated gene models and 2 within putative transposon sequence (Figure 1). The BAC/PAC clones on rice linkage group 1 were numbered 1–393 according to the minimum tiling path from The Institute of Genomic Research as of September 2006. This numbering is used for Figure 1. The GenBank accession number for each BAC/PAC clone used is given in Table 1. An extended version of Table 1 is available in supplemental material at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/. This table gives full primer details along with the locus identifier of the functionally annotated gene model used.
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The work described is not testing the microcolinearity between Lolium/Festuca and rice. Also, by the nature of the primer design we concentrated on generally conserved sequences. Therefore it was not possible to develop SNPs for grass and rice sequences that have diverged.
| DISCUSSION |
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We undertook a specific examination of the classes of genes (functionally annotated gene models as compared to transposons, retrotransposons, and hypothetical proteins) in the regions of the chromosome exhibiting very low frequencies of recombination, i.e., from 38 to 73% of the distance along the chromosome (Figure 1). This region covers 35% of the physical distance of Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 and contains both the centromere and the NOR. Recombination in this region of the chromosome is extremely low throughout, almost touching zero in places (KING et al. 2002b). Despite this low frequency of recombination, 50% of BAC/PAC clones from rice group 1 containing 36% of the functionally annotated gene models are physically located within this 35% region of Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 (Figure 2).
Recombination and gene distribution in other monocots:
Localization of chiasma to the distal ends of the chromosomes is not specific to Lolium and Festuca. For example, SNAPE et al. (1985) demonstrated little or no crossing over between the centromere and the NOR in chromosome 1B of wheat. More recently wheat deletion mapping has demonstrated chiasma localization; i.e., it has been shown that there is a gradient in recombination increasing from the centromere to the telomere (LUKASZEWSKI and CURTIS 1993; AKHUNOV et al. 2003a). ERAYMAN et al. (2004) showed that one-fourth of the wheat genome present around the centromere accounted for <1% of the total recombination. Chiasma localization has also been demonstrated in sorghum (KLEIN et al. 2003; KIM et al. 2005) and barley (KÜNZEL et al. 2000). The average rate of recombination across the heterochromatic portion (concentrated in proximal regions) of sorghum was
34-fold lower than that of recombination in euchromatic regions (concentrated in more distal regions of the chromosomes). In barley chromosome 3H, a region spanning the centromere and covering
45% of the total physical length of the chromosome was reported to show no recombination (KÜNZEL et al. 2000).
The gene loci distribution we describe differs from the general conclusions drawn in wheat over the last decade, where the large majority of genes have been described as being located toward the distal regions of the chromosome arms (leaving the pericentromeric/proximal regions of the chromosome largely gene poor). ERAYMAN et al. (2004) located 94% of the genes in wheat to 48 gene-rich regions (29% of the wheat genome). No gene-rich regions were located in the centromeric regions of any of the wheat chromosomes and only one small gene-rich region containing 4% of the arm's genes was observed in the proximal 20% of any chromosome. A very similar pattern of gene distribution has been described for sorghum where higher gene densities were reported for the distal regions of chromosome 3 compared to the pericentromeric region (KLEIN et al. 2003; KIM et al. 2005). Likewise in barley, recombination hotspots making up 4.9% of the total barley genome were found to contain 47.3% of the 429 markers (most thought to represent genes) mapped to the physical map (KÜNZEL et al. 2000). These regions of high recombination were located mainly in the distal regions of the chromosomes but also in some interstitial positions specific to each of the individual chromosome arms.
Although much of the published work has indicated the presence of distally located gene-rich regions, it has recently been speculated that there is actually a more even distribution of genes in the wheat genome (DEVOS et al. 2005) in agreement with results from the early stages of cereal comparative mapping. From this early work it was apparent that the gene content of whole rice chromosomes (particularly rice linkage groups 8, 10, 11, and 12) might map into pericentromeric/proximal regions in wheat and barley (MOORE 1995; MOORE et al. 1995; VAN DEYNZE et al. 1995). As a rice chromosome is likely to contain thousands of genes, the proximal regions are also likely therefore to contain a similar number of genes. Studies exploiting barley deletions also inferred this physically (KORZUN and KÜNZEL 1996) by showing that RFLPs localized on the linkage maps of rice chromosomes 5 and 10 were allocated to cytologically defined regions of barley chromosome 5 (1H). The rice map of linkage group 5 was divided into two parts relating to the distal portions of both the short and the long arms of the barley chromosome. The map of rice chromosome 10, however, was related to an interstitial segment on the long arm of barley chromosome 5 (1H), a region highly suppressed in recombination activity. This distribution of genes is also substantiated by the National Science Foundation project in bin mapping wheat unigenes. First, for example, the consensus chromosome for wheat group 3 shows the most proximal bin in the long arm to have a higher number of mapped ESTs than some bins in more distal positions. In addition, in both long and short arms a central bin had very high numbers of mapped ESTs (MUNKVOLD et al. 2004). Second, synteny between rice chromosome 1 and the wheat group 3 consensus chromosome would suggest that a large number of the BAC/PAC clones from rice linkage group 1 are actually located in the proximal regions on wheat group 3. Approximately BAC/PAC clone 90 (AP000815) to BAC/PAC clone 253 (AP003760) were located in the bins immediately surrounding the centromere; i.e.,
163 BAC/PAC clones (42% of the total from rice linkage group 1) are located in these proximal regions (MUNKVOLD et al. 2004). If the most proximal half of each chromosome arm is looked at then
250 BAC/PAC clones (64% of the total) from rice linkage group 1 are located within this region. It is possible that microsynteny may be greatly disrupted within these proximal regions but this would be in contradiction to the general evolutionary trends previously described (AKHUNOV et al. 2003b). These studies showed that new loci, as well as fixed deletions, are more frequent in high-recombination regions at the distal ends of the wheat chromosomes. As a result of these trends the distal regions of wheat chromosome arms have been evolving faster than the proximal regions, resulting in more frequent exceptions to the colinearity and microcolinearity between rice and wheat at the distal chromosome regions.
Likewise, alignment of the sorghum 3 physical map to rice chromosome 1 shows the location of 157 BAC/PAC clones from rice chromosome 1 occurring within the region from 62.0 to 105.2 cM (43.2 cM) that spans the sorghum centromere.
The results from the Lolium/Festuca introgression mapping strongly support these latter findings, i.e., large numbers of BAC/PAC clones and hence gene loci (albeit with a relatively high ratio of transposons, retrotransposons, and hypothetical proteins) mapping to regions of the chromosomes showing very low frequencies of recombination.
The more recent work described above suggests that physical mapping of ESTs in both wheat and sorghum may not be detecting proximally located genes that are orthologous to sequences in rice. Both the deletion maps of wheat and the in situ hybridization maps of sorghum are built on the mapping of wheat and sorghum ESTs followed by comparisons to rice made via their homology to rice genes. In contrast, in the introgression mapping work described here, orthologous grass markers have been developed directly from rice coding sequences. It is these orthologous markers that have then been bin mapped in Lolium/Festuca. The reasons for the absence of genes in the proximal regions of wheat and sorghum could therefore possibly result from (1) only partially representative EST libraries or (2) an inability to detect ESTs as a result of low sequence polymorphism (SORRELLS et al. 2003 and RANDHAWA et al. 2004 reported between 24 and 45% of loci as monomorphic and therefore that could not be mapped to either nulli-tetrasomic or deletion lines).
Synteny:
Macrocolinearity between Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 and rice chromosome 1 appears to be largely intact with only the two disruptions, neither of which is as extensive as the segmental inversion in the short arm of chromosome 3 of sorghum compared to rice as reported by KLEIN et al. (2003), which involved
63 of the rice linkage group 1 BAC/PAC clones.
Microcolinearity is probably less intact although to answer this properly would require the introgression mapping of several sequences from functionally annotated gene models from the same BAC/PAC clone. Disruption to microcolinearity would be consistent with work in wheat where some bins on the deletion maps have been shown to have a greater synteny to rice compared to others. However, even in the conserved bins, an average of 35% of the putative single-copy genes still mapped to different and syntenically unexpected rice linkage groups (SORRELLS et al. 2003; LA ROTA and SORRELLS 2004). Similar disruption to synteny at the individual gene level has also been described in other cereals such as maize (BENNETZEN and RAMAKRISHNA 2002).
Physical alignment of Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 and wheat homeologous group 3 chromosomes:
It is possible to make initial comparisons between Lolium/Festuca and other monocot species through rice. Figure 3 shows the BAC/PAC clones from rice linkage group 1 that have been physically mapped on Lolium/Festuca chromosome 3 compared to their physical locations in wheat. To avoid possible complications with microsynteny only those BAC/PAC clones that have been mapped in both Lolium/Festuca and wheat using the same functionally annotated gene model in rice are shown. For example, BAC/PAC clone 371 (AP004332) has been physically mapped in both Lolium/Festuca and wheat, using sequence from Locus_OS01g70170 (transaldolase 2, putative, expressed).
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The consequences of low recombination on allelic reassortment:
Our research strongly suggests that modern and past breeding strategies may have only skimmed the surface of the genetic variation available for the development of improved varieties; i.e., the majority of selections for new and novel allelic combinations have, by default, been centered on relatively few genes located in regions of high recombination near the ends of the chromosomes. Linked genes in areas of very low recombination will assort only very rarely, if at all. In addition, the probability of detecting a rare recombinant event in a region of low recombination frequency in breeding programs without prior knowledge and the use of markers flanking these target regions of the genome is very small. From these data we predict that, in grasses, for example, 47% of the sequences that are orthologous to rice linkage group 1 coding sequence will remain linked and thus will be resistant to selection in breeding programs and isolation via map-based cloning. The Lolium/Festuca introgression system will provide a means of exploiting these low recombination regions. Lolium/Festuca group 3 monosomic substitution is fully fertile and therefore it is possible to generate many thousands of BC2 plants. These plants can then be screened for flanking markers either side of a region of interest to break the region into much smaller physical bins. With the rice BAC/PAC clones physically mapped it will then be possible to say within fairly narrow limits which region(s) of the rice genome is syntenic to this targeted region of Lolium/Festuca. This procedure has presently been exploited in grass and led to the isolation of a gene that confers delayed senescence and that underlies Mendel's I locus that controls color in pea (ARMSTEAD et al. 2006, 2007).
In addition, the presence of large numbers of coding sequences located in regions of the genomes of grass, wheat, and sorghum, etc., that undergo very low levels of recombination also has a significant evolutionary significance; i.e., specific allelic combinations will remain linked over many generations; e.g., it has been speculated that such regions of the genome may carry coadapted gene complexes, supergenes, or homozygous housekeeping genes.
The work we have described is enabling the transfer of information between rice and the large-genome monocot crop species and is being used to inform breeding and basic research programs. A genomewide high-resolution comparison of gene order and distribution in rice, Lolium, wheat, barley, etc., is presently being undertaken.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Communicating editor: J. A. BIRCHLER
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