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RNA Findings offer New Perspective for Breeding Polyploid Crops

Crops often have multiple genomes hybridized from their parents, a condition known as polyploidy.

Polyploidy is a major route to the formation of new species in plants and an important way of improving agronomic traits in crops.

In polyploids, the effect of subgenomes is not equal: the  of one subgenome is dominant over the other, resulting in what is called subgenome expression asymmetry.

During the process of gene expression, DNA is transcribed into RNA, which is then used make protein, through a process termed translation. Until now it has been unclear whether there is a subgenome asymmetry at translational level in polyploid plants.

Researchers from John Innes Centre, along with collaborators in China have discovered that there is subgenome asymmetry at translational level in tetraploid wheat.

They found RNA  contributes to this translational asymmetry between the parental subgenomes. These new findings will help wheat breeders understand how traits are inherited.

Through a hybridisation and whole-genome duplication that happened around 400,000 years ago, wheat species either have two or three copies of each gene, termed as homeologous pairs.

Combining expertise in RNA biology from the Ding group with expertise of wheat genomics from the Uauy group at the John Innes Centre and the Zhang group from Northeast Normal University in China allowed the team to look at how much of the protein was made from homeologous pairs from different subgenomes.

Using the SHAPE method developed by the Ding lab to capture the snapshot of RNA  allowed the team to study the relationship between RNA structure and translation. They found that the single strandedness of the RNA is associated with higher translation efficiency, making more proteins on these RNAs.

There are sequence variations between the homeologs, known as single nucleotide variations (SNVs). The team wanted to find out if these SNVs may cause differences in RNA structure of homeologous pairs.

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