Tuesday 24 April 2018, 1.00PM
Speaker(s): C. Robin Buell, Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing MI 48824
Cultivated potato is a vegetatively propagated autotetraploid, a unique trait among major crop and model plant species. The assembly of characteristics that define cultivated potato relies on a complex balance of multiallelic loci with frequent epistatic interactions that are lost through sexual reproduction, with the result that most progeny are inferior to either parent as a consequence of inbreeding depression. We have uncovered a high degree of heterozygosity and rampant copy number variation that result in a highly heterogenous genome and a complex transcriptome with additive and non-additive gene expression. Using a panel of wild species, landraces, and cultivars, we have identified introgressions from wild species, loci under selection, and confirmed the single origin of domestication for this important food crop. Collectively, these results provide new foundations to begin to breed potato for improved agronomic traits to meet 21st century food security needs.
For schedule enquiries please contact judith.mitchell@york.ac.uk.
Location: K018
Email: luke.mackinder@york.ac