GMI: 1,135 Genomes Reveal the Global Pattern of Polymorphism in Arabidopsis thaliana

Today, in a ground-breaking study, an international consortium spearheaded by Magnus Nordborg at the ÖAW’s Gregor Mendel Institute of Plant Molecular Biology in Vienna,and Detlef Weigel at the Max-Planck Institute of Developmental Biology in Tübingen, released high quality genomic sequence of 1135 Arabidopsis individuals collected from different areas across the globe.

Arabidopsis thaliana serves as a model organism for the study of fundamental physiological, cellular, and molecular processes. It has also greatly advanced our understanding of intraspecific genome variation. We present a detailed map of variation in 1,135 high-quality re-sequenced natural inbred lines representing the native Eurasian and North African range and recently colonized North America. We identify relict populations that continue to inhabit ancestral habitats, primarily in the Iberian Peninsula. They have mixed with a lineage that has spread to northern latitudes from an unknown glacial refugium and is now found in a much broader spectrum of habitats. Insights into the history of the species and the fine-scale distribution of genetic diversity provide the basis for full exploitation of A. thaliana natural variation through integration of genomes and epigenomes with molecular and non-molecular phenotypes.

Original Publication
The 1001 Genomes Consortium (2016) 1,135 Genomes Reveal the Global Pattern of Polymorphism in Arabidopsis thaliana. Cell

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