Background
Asian rice is one of the world’s most widely cultivated crops. Large-scale resequencing analyses have been undertaken to explore the domestication and de-domestication genomic history of Asian rice, but the evolution of rice is still under debate.
Results
Here, we construct a syntelog-based rice pan-genome by integrating and merging 74 high-accuracy genomes based on long-read sequencing, encompassing all ecotypes and taxa of Oryza sativa and Oryza rufipogon. Analyses of syntelog groups illustrate subspecies divergence in gene presence-and-absence and haplotype composition and identify massive genomic regions putatively introgressed from ancient Geng/japonica to ancient Xian/indica or its wild ancestor, including almost all well-known domestication genes and a 4.5-Mbp centromere-spanning block, supporting a single domestication event in main rice subspecies. Genomic comparisons between weedy and cultivated rice highlight the contribution from wild introgression to the emergence of de-domestication syndromes in weedy rice.
Conclusions
This work highlights the significance of inter-taxa introgression in shaping diversification and divergence in rice evolution and provides an exploratory attempt by utilizing the advantages of pan-genomes in evolutionary studies.
Weedy rye (
Secale cereale
subsp.
segetale
Zhukov 1928) is a problematic weed species in wheat field. However, it can potentially provide valuable genetics resources to increase the genetic variations and introduce desirable genes for rye and wheat breeding. Here, we assembled the complete chloroplast genome of
S. cereale
subsp.
segetale
. The chloroplast genome is 137,051 bp in length, containing a large single copy region (81,090 bp), a small single copy region (12,795 bp) and two separated inverted repeat regions (21,583 bp). A total of 131 unique genes were annotated, consisting of 82 protein-coding genes, 41 tRNA genes, and 8 rRNA genes. The phylogenetic analysis showed that
Secale cereale
subsp.
segetale
(weedy rye) and
S. cereale
subsp
. cereale
(rye) clustered together as sisters to other
Secale
species.
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