How genome diversity tells the story of crops

Results & impact 20 June 2024
Exploring the genome diversity of tropical crops is crucial to improving varieties in response to climate and environmental challenges. 热博体育 and its partners have made a pioneering, fundamental contribution to this, recounted in the first of a series of article on The Conversation marking 热博体育's 40th anniversary.
Maintaining the adaptation capacity of crops 漏 A. D鈥橦ont, 热博体育
Maintaining the adaptation capacity of crops 漏 A. D鈥橦ont, 热博体育

Maintaining the adaptation capacity of crops © A. D’Hont, 热博体育

On 14 April this year, Le Monde reported that the sugarcane genome had at last been cracked, welcoming a publication . This was indeed a remarkable achievement, since of all crops, it is undoubtedly sugarcane that has the most complex genome. That of rice, the first crop genome to be sequenced, more than 20 years ago, was "simple": 12 chromosomes, two identical copies of each, for a total of 400 million base pairs (Mb) (nitrogen base pairs located on two complementary DNA strands).

Sugarcane is much more complex: the plant, a polyploid, contains more copies of each chromosome than conventional plants. It has ten times more chromosomes than rice, each of them longer, for a genome that is twenty times the size. To crack the code, the 热博体育 research team came up with the idea of using sorghum as a model: it is a close cousin from the same family (Graminaceae or grasses)? That has kept a similar genome structure without the number of chromosomes being multiplied like in sugarcane.

But why bother studying the genome of crops and their different varieties? The diversity they contain in fact reveals the way in which they have evolved as farmers have selected them in different environments and for various purposes. For instance, rice has evolved through mutations and natural crosses between different forms that appeared around the Himalayas, which were selected each year during its domestication, which began as much as ten thousand years ago. This has resulted in a sufficient number of varieties to guarantee production in a vast range of environments.

Sugarcane, for its part, comes from the islands of Southeast Asia: it is the result of broader genetic mixing, incorporating several related species. This has enabled it to combines resistance to various diseases and incomparable vegetative vigour, making it the plant that is most efficient at producing biomass. It is so tolerant of genetic mixing that all sorts of hybrids can be produced, even intergeneric ones, combining different botanical species.

Understanding how serves to plan and speed up future crop .

Forty years of plant genome research

This is what prompted 热博体育 to set up a tropical species genome analysis laboratory as long ago as 1986. The laboratory later became the Grand plateau technique régional de génotypage (regional genotyping platform). Its teams produced the first genetic maps and then, thanks to the national genotyping structure, notably the , and to various international collaborations, they made the news in the 2010s by placing several tropical plants among the leading biological models, for instance , and .

The list has grown longer in recent years, with , , and of course . Progress is currently being made on coconut, rubber, oil palm, yam, groundnut and sorghum, along with fonio, extending the genome range to indigenous plants.

For plants whose varieties intercross easily, this makes it possible to pinpoint sequences associated with important agronomic characters – in the field or as regards processing and consumption. The next step is to favour them in the mixes that breeders – creators of new varieties – make before sorting progenies under growing conditions.

For other species, mixing takes longer, and is more random. It is sometimes punctuated by unlikely, almost miraculous combinations. The scientists have been able to highlight surprise hybridizations that attentive humans had managed to identify: dessert bananas, plantain bananas, oranges, lemons, clementines, pummelos and arabica coffee.

Cocoa, disseminated more than 5000 years ago

To take cocoa as an example, it proved possible to study its genome diversity based on modern genomes and ancient DNA found in shards of pre-Columbian pottery.

Cocoa originated in the Amazon, and was disseminated by humans very early on, probably more than 5000 years ago, as far as the Pacific coast and central America. Those people knew of many mixes between populations of very distant genetic origins, which allowed cocoa to adapt to those new environments.

For chocolate fans, that mixing has also enabled the development of new aroma properties, such as those currently found in beans produced by the varieties.

Bananas and citrus, the fruits of hybridization

As far as bananas are concerned, genomics results suggested that their domestication began in the New Guinea region, based on hybrids between the banksii, schizocarpa and possibly zebrina groups of the species Musa acuminata.

Those first cultivars were then transported to different regions of Southeast Asia and hybridized with other local sub-species of the genus Musa, resulting in their diversification and in the different types of varieties we now know, which involve up to .

As for citrus species, their genome diversity shows that most of the species grown in modern times result from four founding species. For instance, limes (Citrus latifolia) are the result of natural hybridization between the Mediterranean lemon and the key lime, and involve four ancestral species.

Genomics has shed light on the way in which reproductive cells (gametes) are produced in these complex genomic contexts, and can help to pave the way for .

Adapting coffee

Lastly, arabica coffee is also the result of one of these unlikely cases of hybridization. It fused the genomes of two different species (Coffea canephora and C. eugenioides), but this only ever happened once.

This new cross occurred some 500 000 years ago in Ethiopia and the Arabs chose it to produce coffee as of the 14th century or thereabouts. It brought many properties as a result of the diversity within each plant, but all the plants derived from it are almost identical.

From then on, to continue its adaptation, seeking out other rare events that could broaden that diversity through introgression from other sources, became the priority. Attention is now focusing on localized forms in Ethiopia and Yemen.

Precious resources for genetic improvement

All these unlikely events specific to each crop were very beneficial, but are difficult to reproduce. It will not be possible to explore variants in order to create and maintain the diversity required for adaptation until we understand all the details. Certain forms, some of them extremely rare, are the only sources of characters that could be crucially important in future.

热博体育, in collaboration with INRAE and IRD and in association with international research networks and private structures, conserves and maintains genetic resource collections, in the form of seeds, freeze-dried cells or whole plants, in , , , and .

These activities are costly, but represent an investment that is essential for the future. By mobilizing the available diversity, in close association with other players – from farmers to research centres – we are preparing the varieties of tomorrow.

Genomic diversity, a key factor in future action, has become a global issue. If we know how to reveal what certain sequences have to offer in terms of biological potential, we can steer their transmission to progenies. It may even be possible to rewrite them , to transmit desirable biological attributes to existing varieties without having to resort to crossing.

Provided the biotechnical knowledge exists, this genetic improvement method , notably by facilitating mixing. As a result, issues surrounding societal choices and are now emerging in a knowledge field that is currently a subject for .

Disseminating knowledge

First and foremost, this exploration of genome diversity is in response to an environmental challenge, climate change, which necessitates speeding up operations to adapt plants to specific contexts – different growing zones –, both contrasting and fast-changing, in close interaction with producers.

However, it also addresses a societal issue: it is essential to guarantee access to information, to enable everyone to take it on board, adapt their crops and continue to feed themselves in a sustainable way. We are therefore working to broaden access to data and analysis tools, by means of  housing dedicated for each plant. And we are helping to build fairer skillsets by providing in functional and comparative genomics tools and how to use them, for junior scientists in France and at our partners in the global South.

 

The authors thank their colleagues, notably Angélique D’Hont, Patrick Ollitrault and Benoît Bertrand, along with Francis Quétier from the Génoscope, for their crucial, pioneering contributions and the founding role they have played.

 

The original French version of this article was