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An updated gene atlas for maize reveals organ‐specific and stress‐induced genes
Author(s) -
Hoopes Genevieve M.,
Hamilton John P.,
Wood Joshua C.,
Esteban Eddi,
Pasha Asher,
Vaillancourt Brieanne,
Provart Nicholas J.,
Buell C. Robin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/tpj.14184
Subject(s) - atlas (anatomy) , gene , biology , computational biology , genetics , evolutionary biology , anatomy
Summary Maize ( Zea mays L.), a model species for genetic studies, is one of the two most important crop species worldwide. The genome sequence of the reference genotype, B73, representative of the stiff stalk heterotic group was recently updated ( AGP v4) using long‐read sequencing and optical mapping technology. To facilitate the use of AGP v4 and to enable functional genomic studies and association of genotype with phenotype, we determined expression abundances for replicated mRNA ‐sequencing datasets from 79 tissues and five abiotic/biotic stress treatments revealing 36 207 expressed genes. Characterization of the B73 transcriptome across six organs revealed 4154 organ‐specific and 7704 differentially expressed (DE) genes following stress treatment. Gene co‐expression network analyses revealed 12 modules associated with distinct biological processes containing 13 590 genes providing a resource for further association of gene function based on co‐expression patterns. Presence−absence variants ( PAV s) previously identified using whole genome resequencing data from 61 additional inbred lines were enriched in organ‐specific and stress‐induced DE genes suggesting that PAV s may function in phenological variation and adaptation to environment. Relative to core genes conserved across the 62 profiled inbreds, PAV s have lower expression abundances which are correlated with their frequency of dispersion across inbreds and on average have significantly fewer co‐expression network connections suggesting that a subset of PAV s may be on an evolutionary path to pseudogenization. To facilitate use by the community, we developed the Maize Genomics Resource website (maize.plantbiology.msu.edu) for viewing and data‐mining these resources and deployed two new views on the maize electronic Fluorescent Pictograph Browser (bar.utoronto.ca/efp_maize).