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Featured researches published by Junkang Rong.


Nature | 2003

Unravelling angiosperm genome evolution by phylogenetic analysis of chromosomal duplication events

John E. Bowers; Brad Chapman; Junkang Rong; Andrew H. Paterson

Conservation of gene order in vertebrates is evident after hundreds of millions of years of divergence, but comparisons of the Arabidopsis thaliana sequence to partial gene orders of other angiosperms (flowering plants) sharing common ancestry ∼170–235 million years ago yield conflicting results. This difference may be largely due to the propensity of angiosperms to undergo chromosomal duplication (‘polyploidization’) and subsequent gene loss (‘diploidization’); these evolutionary mechanisms have profound consequences for comparative biology. Here we integrate a phylogenetic approach (relating chromosomal duplications to the tree of life) with a genomic approach (mitigating information lost to diploidization) to show that a genome-wide duplication post-dates the divergence of Arabidopsis from most dicots. We also show that an inferred ancestral gene order for Arabidopsis reveals more synteny with other dicots (exemplified by cotton), and that additional, more ancient duplication events affect more distant taxonomic comparisons. By using partial sequence data for many diverse taxa to better relate the evolutionary history of completely sequenced genomes to the tree of life, we foster comparative approaches to the study of genome organization, consequences of polyploidy, and the molecular basis of quantitative traits.


Nature | 2012

Repeated polyploidization of Gossypium genomes and the evolution of spinnable cotton fibres

Andrew H. Paterson; Jonathan F. Wendel; Heidrun Gundlach; Hui Guo; Jerry Jenkins; Dianchuan Jin; Danny J. Llewellyn; Kurtis C. Showmaker; Shengqiang Shu; Mi-jeong Yoo; Robert L. Byers; Wei Chen; Adi Doron-Faigenboim; Mary V. Duke; Lei Gong; Jane Grimwood; Corrinne E. Grover; Kara Grupp; Guanjing Hu; Tae-Ho Lee; Jingping Li; Lifeng Lin; Tao Liu; Barry S. Marler; Justin T. Page; Alison W. Roberts; Elisson Romanel; William S. Sanders; Emmanuel Szadkowski; Xu Tan

Polyploidy often confers emergent properties, such as the higher fibre productivity and quality of tetraploid cottons than diploid cottons bred for the same environments. Here we show that an abrupt five- to sixfold ploidy increase approximately 60 million years (Myr) ago, and allopolyploidy reuniting divergent Gossypium genomes approximately 1–2 Myr ago, conferred about 30–36-fold duplication of ancestral angiosperm (flowering plant) genes in elite cottons (Gossypium hirsutum and Gossypium barbadense), genetic complexity equalled only by Brassica among sequenced angiosperms. Nascent fibre evolution, before allopolyploidy, is elucidated by comparison of spinnable-fibred Gossypium herbaceum A and non-spinnable Gossypium longicalyx F genomes to one another and the outgroup D genome of non-spinnable Gossypium raimondii. The sequence of a G. hirsutum AtDt (in which ‘t’ indicates tetraploid) cultivar reveals many non-reciprocal DNA exchanges between subgenomes that may have contributed to phenotypic innovation and/or other emergent properties such as ecological adaptation by polyploids. Most DNA-level novelty in G. hirsutum recombines alleles from the D-genome progenitor native to its New World habitat and the Old World A-genome progenitor in which spinnable fibre evolved. Coordinated expression changes in proximal groups of functionally distinct genes, including a nuclear mitochondrial DNA block, may account for clusters of cotton-fibre quantitative trait loci affecting diverse traits. Opportunities abound for dissecting emergent properties of other polyploids, particularly angiosperms, by comparison to diploid progenitors and outgroups.


Genetics | 2004

A 3347-Locus Genetic Recombination Map of Sequence-Tagged Sites Reveals Features of Genome Organization, Transmission and Evolution of Cotton (Gossypium)

Junkang Rong; Colette A. Abbey; John E. Bowers; Curt L. Brubaker; Charlene Chang; Peng W. Chee; Terrye A. Delmonte; Xiaoling Ding; Juan J. Garza; Barry S. Marler; Chan Hwa Park; Gary J. Pierce; Katy M. Rainey; Vipin K. Rastogi; Stefan R. Schulze; Norma L. Trolinder; Jonathan F. Wendel; Thea A. Wilkins; T. Dawn Williams-Coplin; Rod A. Wing; Robert J. Wright; Xinping Zhao; Linghua Zhu; Andrew H. Paterson

We report genetic maps for diploid (D) and tetraploid (AtDt) Gossypium genomes composed of sequence-tagged sites (STS) that foster structural, functional, and evolutionary genomic studies. The maps include, respectively, 2584 loci at 1.72-cM (∼600 kb) intervals based on 2007 probes (AtDt) and 763 loci at 1.96-cM (∼500 kb) intervals detected by 662 probes (D). Both diploid and tetraploid cottons exhibit negative crossover interference; i.e., double recombinants are unexpectedly abundant. We found no major structural changes between Dt and D chromosomes, but confirmed two reciprocal translocations between At chromosomes and several inversions. Concentrations of probes in corresponding regions of the various genomes may represent centromeres, while genome-specific concentrations may represent heterochromatin. Locus duplication patterns reveal all 13 expected homeologous chromosome sets and lend new support to the possibility that a more ancient polyploidization event may have predated the A-D divergence of 6–11 million years ago. Identification of SSRs within 312 RFLP sequences plus direct mapping of 124 SSRs and exploration for CAPS and SNPs illustrate the “portability” of these STS loci across populations and detection systems useful for marker-assisted improvement of the worlds leading fiber crop. These data provide new insights into polyploid evolution and represent a foundation for assembly of a finished sequence of the cotton genome.


Genetics | 2007

Meta-analysis of Polyploid Cotton QTL Shows Unequal Contributions of Subgenomes to a Complex Network of Genes and Gene Clusters Implicated in Lint Fiber Development

Junkang Rong; F. Alex Feltus; Vijay N. Waghmare; Gary J. Pierce; Peng W. Chee; Xavier Draye; Yehoshua Saranga; Robert J. Wright; Thea A. Wilkins; O. Lloyd May; C. Wayne Smith; John R. Gannaway; Jonathan F. Wendel; Andrew H. Paterson

QTL mapping experiments yield heterogeneous results due to the use of different genotypes, environments, and sampling variation. Compilation of QTL mapping results yields a more complete picture of the genetic control of a trait and reveals patterns in organization of trait variation. A total of 432 QTL mapped in one diploid and 10 tetraploid interspecific cotton populations were aligned using a reference map and depicted in a CMap resource. Early demonstrations that genes from the non-fiber-producing diploid ancestor contribute to tetraploid lint fiber genetics gain further support from multiple populations and environments and advanced-generation studies detecting QTL of small phenotypic effect. Both tetraploid subgenomes contribute QTL at largely non-homeologous locations, suggesting divergent selection acting on many corresponding genes before and/or after polyploid formation. QTL correspondence across studies was only modest, suggesting that additional QTL for the target traits remain to be discovered. Crosses between closely-related genotypes differing by single-gene mutants yield profoundly different QTL landscapes, suggesting that fiber variation involves a complex network of interacting genes. Members of the lint fiber development network appear clustered, with cluster members showing heterogeneous phenotypic effects. Meta-analysis linked to synteny-based and expression-based information provides clues about specific genes and families involved in QTL networks.


Euphytica | 2000

A new powdery mildew resistance gene: Introgression from wild emmer into common wheat and RFLP-based mapping

Junkang Rong; E. Millet; J. Manisterski; Moshe Feldman

An Israeli accession (TTD140) of wild emmer, Triticum turgidum var. dicoccoides, was found resistant to several races of powdery mildew. Inoculation of the chromosome-arm substitution lines (CASLs) of TTD140, in the background of the Israeli common wheat cultivar ‘Bethlehem’ (BL), with five isolates of powdery mildew revealed that only the line carrying the short arm of chromosome 2B of wild emmer (CASL 2BS) exhibited complete resistance to four of the five isolates. To map and tag the powdery mildew resistance gene, 41 recombinant substitution lines, derived from a cross between BL and CASL 2BS, were used to construct a linkage map at the gene region. The map, which encompasses 69.5 cM of the distal region of chromosome arm 2BS, contains six RFLP markers, a morphological marker (glaucousness inhibitor, W1I), and the powdery mildew resistance gene. Segregation ratios for resistance in F2 of BL × CASL 2BS and in the recombinant lines, combined with the susceptability of F1 progeny to all tested isolates, indicate that resistance is controlled by a single recessive allele. This alleleco-segregated with a polymorphic locus detected by the DNA marker Xwg516, 49.4 cM from the terminal marker Xcdo456. The new powdery mildew resistance gene was designated Pm26.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005

Genetic mapping and comparative analysis of seven mutants related to seed fiber development in cotton

Junkang Rong; Gary J. Pierce; Vijay N. Waghmare; Carl J. Rogers; Aparna Desai; Peng W. Chee; O. Lloyd May; John R. Gannaway; Jonathan F. Wendel; Thea A. Wilkins; Andrew H. Paterson

Mapping of genes that play major roles in cotton fiber development is an important step toward their cloning and manipulation, and provides a test of their relationships (if any) to agriculturally-important QTLs. Seven previously identified fiber mutants, four dominant (Li1, Li2, N1 and Fbl) and three recessive (n2, sma-4(ha), and sma-4(fz)), were genetically mapped in six F2 populations comprising 124 or more plants each. For those mutants previously assigned to chromosomes by using aneuploids or by linkage to other morphological markers, all map locations were concordant except n2, which mapped to the homoeolog of the chromosome previously reported. Three mutations with primary effects on fuzz fibers (N1, Fbl, n2) mapped near the likelihood peaks for QTLs that affected lint fiber productivity in the same populations, perhaps suggesting pleiotropic effects on both fiber types. However, only Li1 mapped within the likelihood interval for 191 previously detected lint fiber QTLs discovered in non-mutant crosses, suggesting that these mutations may occur in genes that played early roles in cotton fiber evolution, and for which new allelic variants are quickly eliminated from improved germplasm. A close positional association between sma-4(ha), two leaf and stem-borne trichome mutants (t1, t2), and a gene previously implicated in fiber development, sucrose synthase, raises questions about the possibility that these genes may be functionally related. Increasing knowledge of the correspondence of the cotton and Arabidopsis genomes provides several avenues by which genetic dissection of cotton fiber development may be accelerated.


Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2003

A chromosome-specific sequence common to the B genome of polyploid wheat and Aegilops searsii

B. Liu; G. Segal; Junkang Rong; Moshe Feldman

A low-copy, non-coding chromosome-specific DNA sequence, isolated from common wheat, was physically mapped to the distal 19% region of the long arm of chromosome 3B (3BL) of common wheat. This sequence, designated WPG118, was then characterized by Southern hybridization, PCR amplification and sequence comparison using a large collection of polyploid wheats and diploid Triticum and Aegilops species. The data show that the sequence exists in all polyploid wheats containing the B genome and absent from those containing the G genome. At the diploid level, it exists only in Ae. searsii, a diploid species of section Sitopsis, and not in other diploids including Ae. speltoides, the closest extant relative to the donor of the B genome of polyploid wheat. This finding may support the hypothesis that the B-genome of polyploid wheat is of a polyphyletic origin, i.e. it is a recombined genome derived from two or more diploid Aegilops species.


Heredity | 2010

Gene copy number evolution during tetraploid cotton radiation

Junkang Rong; Frank A. Feltus; Lei Liu; Lifeng Lin; Andrew H. Paterson

After polyploid formation, retention or loss of duplicated genes is not random. Genes with some functional domains are convergently restored to ‘singleton’ state after many independent genome duplications, and have been referred to as ‘duplication-resistant’ (DR) genes. To further explore the timeframe for their restoration to the singleton state, 27 cotton homologs of genes found to be ‘DR’ in Arabidopsis were selected based on diagnostic Pfam domains. Their copy numbers were studied using southern hybridization and sequence analysis in five tetraploid species and their ancestral A and D genome diploids. DR genes had significantly lower copy number than gene families hybridizing to randomly selected cotton ESTs. Three DR genes showed complete loss of D genome-derived homoeologs in some or all tetraploid species. Prior analysis has shown gene loss in polyploid cotton to be rare, and herein only one randomly selected gene showed loss of a homoeolog in only one of the five tetraploid species (Gossypium mustelinum). BAC sequencing confirmed two cases of gene loss in tetraploid cotton. Divergence among 5′ sequences of DR genes amplified from G. arboreum, G. raimondii, and Gossypioides kirkii was correlated with gene copy number. These results show that genes containing Pfam domains associated with duplication resistance in Arabidopsis have also been preferentially restored to low copy number after a more recent polyploidization event in cotton. In tetraploid cotton, genes from the progenitor D genome seem to experience more gene copy number divergence than genes from the A genome. Together with D subgenome-biased alterations in gene expression, perhaps gene loss may contribute to the relatively larger portion of quantitative trait variation attributable to D than A subgenome chromosomes of tetraploid cotton.


Israel Journal of Plant Sciences | 1999

RESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM IN WILD AND CULTIVATED TETRAPLOID WHEAT

Li Huang; Eitan Millet; Junkang Rong; Jonathan F. Wendel; Y. Anikster; Moshe Feldman

ABSTRACT RFLP diversity in the nuclear genome was estimated within and among Israeli populations of wild emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum var. dicoccoides) from a long-term study site at Ammiad (NE Israel), and from several other geographical locations. Using 55 enzyme-probe combinations, high levels of genetic diversity were revealed in wild emmer in general and within the Ammiad site. In spite of high diversity, observed heterozygosity was low and populations consisted of a patchwork of alternate multilocus homozygotes, consistent with the reproductive biology of a predominant self-fertilizing species. Retention of genetic diversity in wild emmer may be promoted by large population sizes, microhabitat diversity, and occasional gene flow through both pollen and seed. Population genetic structure in wild emmer appears to have been influenced by historical founder events as well as selective factors. Multivariate analyses indicated that individuals tend to cluster together according to their population of or...


Genomics | 2011

Comparative analysis of Gossypium and Vitis genomes indicates genome duplication specific to the Gossypium lineage

Lifeng Lin; Haibao Tang; Rosana O. Compton; Cornelia Lemke; Lisa K. Rainville; Xiyin Wang; Junkang Rong; Mukesh Kumar Rana; Andrew H. Paterson

Genetic mapping studies have suggested that diploid cotton (Gossypium) might be an ancient polyploid. However, further evidence is lacking due to the complexity of the genome and the lack of sequence resources. Here, we used the grape (Vitis vinifera) genome as an out-group in two different approaches to further explore evidence regarding ancient genome duplication (WGD) event(s) in the diploid Gossypium lineage and its (their) effects: a genome-level alignment analysis and a local-level sequence component analysis. Both studies suggest that at least one round of genome duplication occurred in the Gossypium lineage. Also, gene densities in corresponding regions from Gossypium raimondii, V. vinifera, Arabidopsis thaliana and Carica papaya genomes are similar, despite the huge difference in their genome sizes and the different number of WGDs each genome has experienced. These observations fit the model that differences in plant genome sizes are largely explained by transposon insertions into heterochromatic regions.

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Vijay N. Waghmare

Central Institute for Cotton Research

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Moshe Feldman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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