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Dive into the research topics where Lunwen Qian is active.

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Featured researches published by Lunwen Qian.


The Plant Genome | 2015

Subgenomic Diversity Patterns Caused by Directional Selection in Bread Wheat Gene Pools

Kai P. Voss-Fels; Matthias Frisch; Lunwen Qian; Stefan Kontowski; Wolfgang Friedt; Sven Gottwald; Rod J. Snowdon

Genetic diversity represents the fundamental key to breeding success, providing the basis for breeders to select varieties with constantly improving yield performance. On the other hand, strong selection during domestication and breeding have eliminated considerable genetic diversity in the breeding pools of major crops, causing erosion of genetic potential for adaptation to emerging challenges like climate change. High‐throughput genomic technologies can address this dilemma by providing detailed knowledge to characterize and replenish genetic diversity in breeding programs. In hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), the staple food for 35% of the worlds population, bottlenecks during allopolyploidisation followed by strong artificial selection have considerably narrowed diversity to the extent that yields in many regions appear to be unexpectedly stagnating. In this study, we used a 90,000 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) wheat genotyping array to assay high‐frequency, polymorphic SNP markers in 460 accessions representing different phenological diversity groups from Asian, Australian, European, and North American bread wheat breeding materials. Detailed analysis of subgroup diversity at the chromosome and subgenome scale revealed highly distinct patterns of conserved linkage disequilibrium between different gene pools. The data enable identification of genome regions in most need of rejuvenation with novel diversity and provide a high‐resolution molecular basis for genomic‐assisted introgression of new variation into chromosome segments surrounding directionally selected metaloci conferring important adaptation and quality traits.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2017

Linkage drag constrains the roots of modern wheat

Kai P. Voss-Fels; Lunwen Qian; Sebastian Parra-Londono; Ralf Uptmoor; Matthias Frisch; Gabriel Keeble-Gagnère; R. Appels; Rod J. Snowdon

Roots, the hidden half of crop plants, are essential for resource acquisition. However, knowledge about the genetic control of below-ground plant development in wheat, one of the most important small-grain crops in the world, is very limited. The molecular interactions connecting root and shoot development and growth, and thus modulating the plants demand for water and nutrients along with its ability to access them, are largely unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that linkage drag in European bread wheat, driven by strong selection for a haplotype variant controlling heading date, has eliminated a specific combination of two flanking, highly conserved haplotype variants whose interaction confers increased root biomass. Reversing this inadvertent consequence of selection could recover root diversity that may prove essential for future food production in fluctuating environments. Highly conserved synteny to rice across this chromosome segment suggests that adaptive selection has shaped the diversity landscape of this locus across different, globally important cereal crops. By mining wheat gene expression data, we identified root-expressed genes within the region of interest that could help breeders to select positive variants adapted to specific target soil environments.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

Haplotype hitchhiking promotes trait coselection in Brassica napus

Lunwen Qian; Wei Qian; Rod J. Snowdon

Summary Local haplotype patterns surrounding densely spaced DNA markers with significant trait associations can reveal information on selective sweeps and genome diversity associated with important crop traits. Relationships between haplotype and phenotype diversity, coupled with analysis of gene content in conserved haplotype blocks, can provide insight into coselection for nonrelated traits. We performed genome‐wide analysis of haplotypes associated with the important physiological and agronomic traits leaf chlorophyll and seed glucosinolate content, respectively, in the major oilseed crop species Brassica napus. A locus on chromosome A01 showed opposite effects on leaf chlorophyll content and seed glucosinolate content, attributed to strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) between orthologues of the chlorophyll biosynthesis genes EARLY LIGHT‐INDUCED PROTEIN and CHLOROPHYLL SYNTHASE, and the glucosinolate synthesis gene ATP SULFURYLASE 1. Another conserved haplotype block, on chromosome A02, contained a number of chlorophyll‐related genes in LD with orthologues of the key glucosinolate biosynthesis genes METHYLTHIOALKYMALATE SYNTHASE‐LIKE 1 and 3. Multigene haplogroups were found to have a significantly greater contribution to variation for chlorophyll content than haplotypes for any single gene, suggesting positive effects of additive locus accumulation. Detailed reanalysis of population substructure revealed a clade of ten related accessions exhibiting high leaf chlorophyll and low seed glucosinolate content. These accessions each carried one of the above‐mentioned haplotypes from A01 or A02, generally in combination with further chlorophyll‐associated haplotypes from chromosomes A05 and/or C05. The phenotypic rather than pleiotropic correlations between leaf chlorophyll content index and seed GSL suggest that LD may have led to inadvertent coselection for these two traits.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Exploring and Harnessing Haplotype Diversity to Improve Yield Stability in Crops

Lunwen Qian; Lee T. Hickey; Andreas Stahl; Christian R. Werner; Ben J. Hayes; Rod J. Snowdon; Kai P. Voss-Fels

In order to meet future food, feed, fiber, and bioenergy demands, global yields of all major crops need to be increased significantly. At the same time, the increasing frequency of extreme weather events such as heat and drought necessitates improvements in the environmental resilience of modern crop cultivars. Achieving sustainably increase yields implies rapid improvement of quantitative traits with a very complex genetic architecture and strong environmental interaction. Latest advances in genome analysis technologies today provide molecular information at an ultrahigh resolution, revolutionizing crop genomic research, and paving the way for advanced quantitative genetic approaches. These include highly detailed assessment of population structure and genotypic diversity, facilitating the identification of selective sweeps and signatures of directional selection, dissection of genetic variants that underlie important agronomic traits, and genomic selection (GS) strategies that not only consider major-effect genes. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers today represent the genotyping system of choice for crop genetic studies because they occur abundantly in plant genomes and are easy to detect. SNPs are typically biallelic, however, hence their information content compared to multiallelic markers is low, limiting the resolution at which SNP–trait relationships can be delineated. An efficient way to overcome this limitation is to construct haplotypes based on linkage disequilibrium, one of the most important features influencing genetic analyses of crop genomes. Here, we give an overview of the latest advances in genomics-based haplotype analyses in crops, highlighting their importance in the context of polyploidy and genome evolution, linkage drag, and co-selection. We provide examples of how haplotype analyses can complement well-established quantitative genetics frameworks, such as quantitative trait analysis and GS, ultimately providing an effective tool to equip modern crops with environment-tailored characteristics.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2017

A genome-wide survey with different rapeseed ecotypes uncovers footprints of domestication and breeding

Dayong Wei; Yixin Cui; Yajun He; Qing Xiong; Lunwen Qian; Chaobo Tong; Guangyuan Lu; Yijuan Ding; Jiana Li; Christian Jung; Wei Qian

In 198 selective sweeps we found functional genes or loci, such as FT and resistance, associated with environmental adaptability and yield-related traits.


The Plant Genome | 2018

Effective Genomic Selection in a Narrow-Genepool Crop with Low-Density Markers: Asian Rapeseed as an Example

Christian R. Werner; Kai P. Voss-Fels; Charlotte N. Miller; Wei Qian; Wei Hua; Chun-Yun Guan; Rod J. Snowdon; Lunwen Qian

Efficiency in genomic selection is not particularly based on detailed genotype profiling facilitated by maximum marker density. Extensive genome‐wide linkage disequilibrium is a common characteristic of breeding pools in many crop species. Every quantitative trait locus across the genome can be captured by one or a few representative markers. Fewer representative markers selected in respect of linkage disequilibrium (LD) can capture the association between a genomic region and a phenotypic trait. Low‐density marker sets enable genomic prediction accuracies in breeding populations with strong LD comparable to those achieved with high‐density genotyping.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Genetic insights into underground responses to Fusarium graminearum infection in wheat

Kai P. Voss-Fels; Lunwen Qian; Iulian Gabur; Christian Obermeier; Lee T. Hickey; Christian R. Werner; Stefan Kontowski; Matthias Frisch; Wolfgang Friedt; Rod J. Snowdon; Sven Gottwald

The ongoing global intensification of wheat production will likely be accompanied by a rising pressure of Fusarium diseases. While utmost attention was given to Fusarium head blight (FHB) belowground plant infections of the pathogen have largely been ignored. The current knowledge about the impact of soil borne Fusarium infection on plant performance and the underlying genetic mechanisms for resistance remain very limited. Here, we present the first large-scale investigation of Fusarium root rot (FRR) resistance using a diverse panel of 215 international wheat lines. We obtained data for a total of 21 resistance-related traits, including large-scale Real-time PCR experiments to quantify fungal spread. Association mapping and subsequent haplotype analyses discovered a number of highly conserved genomic regions associated with resistance, and revealed a significant effect of allele stacking on the stembase discoloration. Resistance alleles were accumulated in European winter wheat germplasm, implying indirect prior selection for improved FRR resistance in elite breeding programs. Our results give first insights into the genetic basis of FRR resistance in wheat and demonstrate how molecular parameters can successfully be explored in genomic prediction. Ongoing work will help to further improve our understanding of the complex interactions of genetic factors influencing FRR resistance.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Sub-genomic selection patterns as a signature of breeding in the allopolyploid Brassica napus genome

Lunwen Qian; Wei Qian; Rod J. Snowdon


Molecular Plant | 2016

Deletion of a Stay-Green Gene Associates with Adaptive Selection in Brassica napus

Lunwen Qian; Kai P. Voss-Fels; Yixin Cui; Habib U. Jan; Birgit Samans; Christian Obermeier; Wei Qian; Rod J. Snowdon


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015

Development of genic cleavage markers in association with seed glucosinolate content in canola

Ying Fu; Kun Lu; Lunwen Qian; Jiaqin Mei; Dayong Wei; Xuhui Peng; Xinfu Xu; Jiana Li; Martin Frauen; Felix Dreyer; Rod J. Snowdon; Wei Qian

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Wei Qian

Southwest University

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Jiana Li

Southwest University

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