Dario Copetti
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Dario Copetti.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Ignazio Verde; A. G. Abbott; Simone Scalabrin; Sook Jung; Shengqiang Shu; Fabio Marroni; Tatyana Zhebentyayeva; Maria Teresa Dettori; Jane Grimwood; Federica Cattonaro; Andrea Zuccolo; Laura Rossini; Jerry Jenkins; Elisa Vendramin; Lee Meisel; Véronique Decroocq; Bryon Sosinski; Simon Prochnik; Therese Mitros; Alberto Policriti; Guido Cipriani; L. Dondini; Stephen P. Ficklin; David Goodstein; Pengfei Xuan; Cristian Del Fabbro; Valeria Aramini; Dario Copetti; Susana González; David S. Horner
Rosaceae is the most important fruit-producing clade, and its key commercially relevant genera (Fragaria, Rosa, Rubus and Prunus) show broadly diverse growth habits, fruit types and compact diploid genomes. Peach, a diploid Prunus species, is one of the best genetically characterized deciduous trees. Here we describe the high-quality genome sequence of peach obtained from a completely homozygous genotype. We obtained a complete chromosome-scale assembly using Sanger whole-genome shotgun methods. We predicted 27,852 protein-coding genes, as well as noncoding RNAs. We investigated the path of peach domestication through whole-genome resequencing of 14 Prunus accessions. The analyses suggest major genetic bottlenecks that have substantially shaped peach genome diversity. Furthermore, comparative analyses showed that peach has not undergone recent whole-genome duplication, and even though the ancestral triplicated blocks in peach are fragmentary compared to those in grape, all seven paleosets of paralogs from the putative paleoancestor are detectable.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Kyung-Hee Kim; Sang Choon Lee; Junki Lee; Yeisoo Yu; Kiwoung Yang; Beom Soon Choi; Hee Jong Koh; Nomar Espinosa Waminal; Hong Il Choi; Nam Hoon Kim; Woojong Jang; Hyun Seung Park; Jonghoon Lee; Hyun Oh Lee; Ho Jun Joh; Hyeon Ju Lee; Jee Young Park; Sampath Perumal; Murukarthick Jayakodi; Yun Sun Lee; Backki Kim; Dario Copetti; Soonok Kim; Sunggil Kim; Ki Byung Lim; Young-Dong Kim; Jungho Lee; Kwang Su Cho; Beom Seok Park; Rod A. Wing
Cytoplasmic chloroplast (cp) genomes and nuclear ribosomal DNA (nR) are the primary sequences used to understand plant diversity and evolution. We introduce a high-throughput method to simultaneously obtain complete cp and nR sequences using Illumina platform whole-genome sequence. We applied the method to 30 rice specimens belonging to nine Oryza species. Concurrent phylogenomic analysis using cp and nR of several of specimens of the same Oryza AA genome species provides insight into the evolution and domestication of cultivated rice, clarifying three ambiguous but important issues in the evolution of wild Oryza species. First, cp-based trees clearly classify each lineage but can be biased by inter-subspecies cross-hybridization events during speciation. Second, O. glumaepatula, a South American wild rice, includes two cytoplasm types, one of which is derived from a recent interspecies hybridization with O. longistminata. Third, the Australian O. rufipogan-type rice is a perennial form of O. meridionalis.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Silvia Venuti; Dario Copetti; Serena Foria; Luigi Falginella; Sarolta Hoffmann; Diana Bellin; Petar Cindrić; Pál Kozma; Simone Scalabrin; Michele Morgante; Raffaele Testolin; Gabriele Di Gaspero
The Amur grape (Vitis amurensis Rupr.) thrives naturally in cool climates of Northeast Asia. Resistance against the introduced pathogen Plasmopara viticola is common among wild ecotypes that were propagated from Manchuria into Chinese vineyards or collected by Soviet botanists in Siberia, and used for the introgression of resistance into wine grapes (Vitis vinifera L.). A QTL analysis revealed a dominant gene Rpv12 that explained 79% of the phenotypic variance for downy mildew resistance and was inherited independently of other resistance genes. A Mendelian component of resistance–a hypersensitive response in leaves challenged with P. viticola–was mapped in an interval of 0.2 cM containing an array of coiled-coil NB-LRR genes on chromosome 14. We sequenced 10-kb genic regions in the Rpv12+ haplotype and identified polymorphisms in 12 varieties of V. vinifera using next-generation sequencing. The combination of two SNPs in single-copy genes flanking the NB-LRR cluster distinguished the resistant haplotype from all others found in 200 accessions of V. vinifera, V. amurensis, and V. amurensis x V. vinifera crosses. The Rpv12+ haplotype is shared by 15 varieties, the most ancestral of which are the century-old ‘Zarja severa’ and ‘Michurinets’. Before this knowledge, the chromosome segment around Rpv12+ became introgressed, shortened, and pyramided with another downy mildew resistance gene from North American grapevines (Rpv3) only by phenotypic selection. Rpv12+ has an additive effect with Rpv3+ to protect vines against natural infections, and confers foliar resistance to strains that are virulent on Rpv3+ plants.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Jianwei Zhang; Ling-Ling Chen; Feng Xing; David Kudrna; Wen Yao; Dario Copetti; Ting Mu; Weiming Li; Jia Ming Song; Weibo Xie; Seunghee Lee; Jayson Talag; Lin Shao; Yue An; Chun Liu Zhang; Yidan Ouyang; Shuai Sun; Wen Biao Jiao; Fang Lv; Bogu Du; Meizhong Luo; Carlos Ernesto Maldonado; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Lizhong Xiong; Changyin Wu; Yongzhong Xing; Dao-Xiu Zhou; Sibin Yu; Yu Zhao; Gongwei Wang
Significance Indica rice accounts for >70% of total rice production worldwide, is genetically highly diverse, and can be divided into two major varietal groups independently bred and widely cultivated in China and Southeast Asia. Here, we generated high-quality genome sequences for two elite rice varieties, Zhenshan 97 and Minghui 63, representing the two groups of indica rice and the parents of a leading rice hybrid. Comparative analyses uncovered extensive structural differences between the two genomes and complementarity in their hybrid transcriptome. These findings have general implications for understanding intraspecific variations of organisms with complex genomes. The availability of the two genomes will serve as a foundation for future genome-based explorations in rice toward both basic and applied goals. Asian cultivated rice consists of two subspecies: Oryza sativa subsp. indica and O. sativa subsp. japonica. Despite the fact that indica rice accounts for over 70% of total rice production worldwide and is genetically much more diverse, a high-quality reference genome for indica rice has yet to be published. We conducted map-based sequencing of two indica rice lines, Zhenshan 97 (ZS97) and Minghui 63 (MH63), which represent the two major varietal groups of the indica subspecies and are the parents of an elite Chinese hybrid. The genome sequences were assembled into 237 (ZS97) and 181 (MH63) contigs, with an accuracy >99.99%, and covered 90.6% and 93.2% of their estimated genome sizes. Comparative analyses of these two indica genomes uncovered surprising structural differences, especially with respect to inversions, translocations, presence/absence variations, and segmental duplications. Approximately 42% of nontransposable element related genes were identical between the two genomes. Transcriptome analysis of three tissues showed that 1,059–2,217 more genes were expressed in the hybrid than in the parents and that the expressed genes in the hybrid were much more diverse due to their divergence between the parental genomes. The public availability of two high-quality reference genomes for the indica subspecies of rice will have large-ranging implications for plant biology and crop genetic improvement.
Nature Communications | 2014
Andrew D. W. Geering; Florian Maumus; Dario Copetti; Nathalie Choisne; Derrick J. Zwickl; Matthias Zytnicki; Alistair R. McTaggart; Simone Scalabrin; Silvia Vezzulli; Rod A. Wing; Hadi Quesneville; Pierre Yves Teycheney
The extent and importance of endogenous viral elements have been extensively described in animals but are much less well understood in plants. Here we describe a new genus of Caulimoviridae called ‘Florendovirus’, members of which have colonized the genomes of a large diversity of flowering plants, sometimes at very high copy numbers (>0.5% total genome content). The genome invasion of Oryza is dated to over 1.8 million years ago (MYA) but phylogeographic evidence points to an even older age of 20–34 MYA for this virus group. Some appear to have had a bipartite genome organization, a unique characteristic among viral retroelements. In Vitis vinifera, 9% of the endogenous florendovirus loci are located within introns and therefore may influence host gene expression. The frequent colocation of endogenous florendovirus loci with TA simple sequence repeats, which are associated with chromosome fragility, suggests sequence capture during repair of double-stranded DNA breaks.
American Journal of Botany | 2015
Michael J. Sanderson; Dario Copetti; Alberto Búrquez; Enriquena Bustamante; Joseph L.M. Charboneau; Luis E. Eguiarte; Sudhir Kumar; Hyun Oh Lee; Junki Lee; Michelle M. McMahon; Kelly Steele; Rod A. Wing; Tae Jin Yang; Derrick J. Zwickl; Martin F. Wojciechowski
UNLABELLED • PREMISE OF THE STUDY Land-plant plastid genomes have only rarely undergone significant changes in gene content and order. Thus, discovery of additional examples adds power to tests for causes of such genome-scale structural changes.• METHODS Using next-generation sequence data, we assembled the plastid genome of saguaro cactus and probed the nuclear genome for transferred plastid genes and functionally related nuclear genes. We combined these results with available data across Cactaceae and seed plants more broadly to infer the history of gene loss and to assess the strength of phylogenetic association between gene loss and loss of the inverted repeat (IR).• KEY RESULTS The saguaro plastid genome is the smallest known for an obligately photosynthetic angiosperm (∼113 kb), having lost the IR and plastid ndh genes. This loss supports a statistically strong association across seed plants between the loss of ndh genes and the loss of the IR. Many nonplastid copies of plastid ndh genes were found in the nuclear genome, but none had intact reading frames; nor did three related nuclear-encoded subunits. However, nuclear pgr5, which functions in a partially redundant pathway, was intact.• CONCLUSIONS The existence of an alternative pathway redundant with the function of the plastid NADH dehydrogenase-like complex (NDH) complex may permit loss of the plastid ndh gene suite in photoautotrophs like saguaro. Loss of these genes may be a recurring mechanism for overall plastid genome size reduction, especially in combination with loss of the IR.
Nature | 2018
W.Y. Wang; Ramil Mauleon; Zhiqiang Hu; Dmytro Chebotarov; Shuaishuai Tai; Zhichao Wu; Min Li; Tianqing Zheng; Roven Rommel Fuentes; Fan Zhang; Locedie Mansueto; Dario Copetti; Millicent Sanciangco; Kevin Palis; Jianlong Xu; Chen Sun; Binying Fu; Hongliang Zhang; Yongming Gao; Xiuqin Zhao; Fei Shen; Xiao Cui; Hong Yu; Zichao Li; Miaolin Chen; Jeffrey Detras; Yongli Zhou; Xinyuan Zhang; Yue Zhao; Dave Kudrna
Here we analyse genetic variation, population structure and diversity among 3,010 diverse Asian cultivated rice (Oryza sativa L.) genomes from the 3,000 Rice Genomes Project. Our results are consistent with the five major groups previously recognized, but also suggest several unreported subpopulations that correlate with geographic location. We identified 29 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 2.4 million small indels and over 90,000 structural variations that contribute to within- and between-population variation. Using pan-genome analyses, we identified more than 10,000 novel full-length protein-coding genes and a high number of presence–absence variations. The complex patterns of introgression observed in domestication genes are consistent with multiple independent rice domestication events. The public availability of data from the 3,000 Rice Genomes Project provides a resource for rice genomics research and breeding.Analyses of genetic variation and population structure based on over 3,000 cultivated rice (Oryza sativa) genomes reveal subpopulations that correlate with geographic location and patterns of introgression consistent with multiple rice domestication events.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2017
Marta Brozynska; Dario Copetti; Agnelo Furtado; Rod A. Wing; Darren M. Crayn; Glen Fox; Ryuji Ishikawa; Robert J Henry
Summary The related A genome species of the Oryza genus are the effective gene pool for rice. Here, we report draft genomes for two Australian wild A genome taxa: O. rufipogon‐like population, referred to as Taxon A, and O. meridionalis‐like population, referred to as Taxon B. These two taxa were sequenced and assembled by integration of short‐ and long‐read next‐generation sequencing (NGS) data to create a genomic platform for a wider rice gene pool. Here, we report that, despite the distinct chloroplast genome, the nuclear genome of the Australian Taxon A has a sequence that is much closer to that of domesticated rice (O. sativa) than to the other Australian wild populations. Analysis of 4643 genes in the A genome clade showed that the Australian annual, O. meridionalis, and related perennial taxa have the most divergent (around 3 million years) genome sequences relative to domesticated rice. A test for admixture showed possible introgression into the Australian Taxon A (diverged around 1.6 million years ago) especially from the wild indica/O. nivara clade in Asia. These results demonstrate that northern Australia may be the centre of diversity of the A genome Oryza and suggest the possibility that this might also be the centre of origin of this group and represent an important resource for rice improvement.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2017
Locedie Mansueto; Roven Rommel Fuentes; Frances Nikki Borja; Jeffery Detras; Juan Miguel Abriol-Santos; Dmytro Chebotarov; Millicent Sanciangco; Kevin Palis; Dario Copetti; Alexandre Poliakov; Inna Dubchak; Victor V. Solovyev; Rod A. Wing; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Ramil Mauleon; Kenneth L. McNally; Nickolai Alexandrov
We describe updates to the Rice SNP-Seek Database since its first release. We ran a new SNP-calling pipeline followed by filtering that resulted in complete, base, filtered and core SNP datasets. Besides the Nipponbare reference genome, the pipeline was run on genome assemblies of IR 64, 93-11, DJ 123 and Kasalath. New genotype query and display features are added for reference assemblies, SNP datasets and indels. JBrowse now displays BAM, VCF and other annotation tracks, the additional genome assemblies and an embedded VISTA genome comparison viewer. Middleware is redesigned for improved performance by using a hybrid of HDF5 and RDMS for genotype storage. Query modules for genotypes, varieties and genes are improved to handle various constraints. An integrated list manager allows the user to pass query parameters for further analysis. The SNP Annotator adds traits, ontology terms, effects and interactions to markers in a list. Web-service calls were implemented to access most data. These features enable seamless querying of SNP-Seek across various biological entities, a step toward semi-automated gene-trait association discovery. URL: http://snp-seek.irri.org.
Nature Genetics | 2018
Joshua C. Stein; Yeisoo Yu; Dario Copetti; Derrick J. Zwickl; Li Zhang; Chengjun Zhang; Kapeel Chougule; Dongying Gao; Aiko Iwata; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Sharon Wei; Jun Wang; Yi Liao; Muhua Wang; Julie Jacquemin; Claude Becker; Dave Kudrna; Jianwei Zhang; Carlos E.M. Londono; Xiang Song; Seunghee Lee; Paul Sanchez; Andrea Zuccolo; Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Jayson Talag; Ann Danowitz; Luis F. Rivera; Andrea R. Gschwend; Christos Noutsos; Cheng Chieh Wu
The genus Oryza is a model system for the study of molecular evolution over time scales ranging from a few thousand to 15 million years. Using 13 reference genomes spanning the Oryza species tree, we show that despite few large-scale chromosomal rearrangements rapid species diversification is mirrored by lineage-specific emergence and turnover of many novel elements, including transposons, and potential new coding and noncoding genes. Our study resolves controversial areas of the Oryza phylogeny, showing a complex history of introgression among different chromosomes in the young ‘AA’ subclade containing the two domesticated species. This study highlights the prevalence of functionally coupled disease resistance genes and identifies many new haplotypes of potential use for future crop protection. Finally, this study marks a milestone in modern rice research with the release of a complete long-read assembly of IR 8 ‘Miracle Rice’, which relieved famine and drove the Green Revolution in Asia 50 years ago.Genome assemblies of 13 domesticated and wild rice relatives reveal salient features of genome evolution across the genus Oryza, especially rapid species diversification and turnover of transposons. This study also releases a complete long-read assembly of IR 8 ‘Miracle Rice’.