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Title: | The genome and population genomics of allopolyploid Coffea arabica reveal the diversification history of modern coffee cultivars | Authors: | Salojaervi, J Rambani, A Yu, Z. Guyot, R Strickler, S Lepelley, M Wang, C Rajaraman, S Rastas, P Zheng, CF Munoz, DS Meidanis, J Paschoal, AR BAWIN, Yves Krabbenhoft, TJ Wang, Z.Q. Fleck, SJ Aussel, R Bellanger, L Charpagne, A Fournier, C Kassam, M Lefebvre, G Metairon, S Moine, D Rigoreau, M Stolte, J Hamon, P Couturon, E Tranchant-Dubreuil, C Mukherjee, M Lan, TY Engelhardt, J Stadler, P De Lemos, SMC Suzuki, SI Sumirat, U Wai, CM Dauchot, N Orozco-Arias, S Garavito, A Kiwuka, C Musoli, P Nalukenge, A Guichoux, E Reinout, H Smit, M. Carretero-Paulet, L Guerreiro, O Braghini, MT Padilha, L Sera, GH Ruttink, T Henry, R Marraccini, P van de Peer, Y Andrade, A Domingues, D Giuliano, G Mueller, L Pereira, LF Plaisance, S Poncet, V Rombauts, S Sankoff, D Albert, VA Crouzillat, D de Kochko, A Descombes, P |
Issue Date: | 2024 | Publisher: | Source: | Nature Genetics, 56 (4) , p. 721 -731 | Abstract: | Cofea arabica, an allotetraploid hybrid of Cofea eugenioides and Cofea canephora, is the source of approximately 60% of cofee products worldwide, and its cultivated accessions have undergone several population bottlenecks. We present chromosome-level assemblies of a di-haploid C. arabica accession and modern representatives of its diploid progenitors, C. eugenioides and C. canephora. The three species exhibit largely conserved genome structures between diploid parents and descendant subgenomes, with no obvious global subgenome dominance. We fnd evidence for a founding polyploidy event 350,000–610,000 years ago, followed by several pre-domestication bottlenecks, resulting in narrow genetic variation. A split between wild accessions and cultivar progenitors occurred ~30.5 thousand years ago, followed by a period of migration between the two populations. Analysis of modern varieties, including lines historically introgressed with C. canephora, highlights their breeding histories and loci that may contribute to pathogen resistance, laying the groundwork for future genomics-based breeding of C. arabica. | Document URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1942/45161 | ISSN: | 1061-4036 | e-ISSN: | 1546-1718 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41588-024-01695-w | ISI #: | WOS:001205474600004 | Category: | A1 | Type: | Journal Contribution |
Appears in Collections: | Research publications |
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s41588-024-01695-w.pdf | Published version | 7.29 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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