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Nature Research, Nature Genetics, 4(53), p. 564-573, 2021

DOI: 10.1038/s41588-021-00807-0

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Chromosome-scale genome assembly provides insights into rye biology, evolution, and agronomic potential

Journal article published in 2019 by M. Timothy Rabanus-Wallace, Bernd Hackauf, Martin Mascher ORCID, Rabanus Wallace Mt, Thomas Lux ORCID, Thomas Wicker ORCID, Mariana Baez, Heidrun Gundlach ORCID, Klaus F. X. Mayer ORCID, Andreas Houben ORCID, Curtis J. Pozniak ORCID, Joanna Melonek ORCID, Liangliang Guo ORCID, Coraline R. Praz, Brande Wulff ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractRye (Secale cereale L.) is an exceptionally climate-resilient cereal crop, used extensively to produce improved wheat varieties via introgressive hybridization and possessing the entire repertoire of genes necessary to enable hybrid breeding. Rye is allogamous and only recently domesticated, thus giving cultivated ryes access to a diverse and exploitable wild gene pool. To further enhance the agronomic potential of rye, we produced a chromosome-scale annotated assembly of the 7.9-gigabase rye genome and extensively validated its quality by using a suite of molecular genetic resources. We demonstrate applications of this resource with a broad range of investigations. We present findings on cultivated rye’s incomplete genetic isolation from wild relatives, mechanisms of genome structural evolution, pathogen resistance, low-temperature tolerance, fertility control systems for hybrid breeding and the yield benefits of rye–wheat introgressions.