2016
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3612
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Exome sequencing of geographically diverse barley landraces and wild relatives gives insights into environmental adaptation

Abstract: After domestication, during a process of widespread range extension, barley adapted to a broad spectrum of agricultural environments. To explore how the barley genome responded to the environmental challenges it encountered, we sequenced the exomes of a collection of 267 georeferenced landraces and wild accessions. A combination of genome-wide analyses showed that patterns of variation have been strongly shaped by geography and that variant-by-environment associations for individual genes are prominent in our … Show more

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Cited by 242 publications
(295 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…For example, P. esperanzae was located in a subtropical arid semihot climatic type near Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas (northeastern Mexico); P. maculatus was detected near Tepatlaxco de Hidalgo, Puebla (central highlands), in a subtropical subhumid temperate climate; and P. xanthotrichus was found growing in a tropical subhumid semihot climate in Teopisca, Chiapas (southeastern Mexico). These findings are preliminary due to the low number of samples analyzed, although they provide valuable information for future and more intensive collections (Gil & Lobo, 2012; Pliscoff & Fuentes‐Castillo, 2011; Ramírez‐Villegas et al., 2010; Russell et al., 2016). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, P. esperanzae was located in a subtropical arid semihot climatic type near Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas (northeastern Mexico); P. maculatus was detected near Tepatlaxco de Hidalgo, Puebla (central highlands), in a subtropical subhumid temperate climate; and P. xanthotrichus was found growing in a tropical subhumid semihot climate in Teopisca, Chiapas (southeastern Mexico). These findings are preliminary due to the low number of samples analyzed, although they provide valuable information for future and more intensive collections (Gil & Lobo, 2012; Pliscoff & Fuentes‐Castillo, 2011; Ramírez‐Villegas et al., 2010; Russell et al., 2016). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such approaches, for example, have been successfully applied to investigating R-gene variation in crop plants (Jupe et al, 2012(Jupe et al, , 2013Andolfo et al, 2014;Giolai et al, 2016;Russell et al, 2016;Van Weymers et al, 2016). Whole genome resequencing approaches could be useful for setting the genomic context and fate of duplications, but there are still substantial challenges to resolve in distinguishing loss of copies from lack of coverage or lack of assembly to the reference due to high sequence divergence.…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When at least a reference transcriptome is available, exome sequencing, also known as whole-exome sequencing, may represent an affordable option for analyzing a well-characterized adaptive trait or very large plant populations [97], because of its reduced running cost when probes are already available. For instance, an investigation of the barley genomic variability related to environmental conditions was carried out starting from the exome sequencing data of more than 250 georeferenced landraces and wild accessions [97].…”
Section: Genomic Scans Of Local Adaptation In Landracesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, an investigation of the barley genomic variability related to environmental conditions was carried out starting from the exome sequencing data of more than 250 georeferenced landraces and wild accessions [97].…”
Section: Genomic Scans Of Local Adaptation In Landracesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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