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Image_2_Genomic view of heavy-ion-induced deletions associated with distribution of essential genes in Arabidopsis thaliana.pdf (370.8 kB)

Image_2_Genomic view of heavy-ion-induced deletions associated with distribution of essential genes in Arabidopsis thaliana.pdf

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posted on 2024-04-17, 04:02 authored by Kotaro Ishii, Yusuke Kazama, Tomonari Hirano, Jeffrey A. Fawcett, Muneo Sato, Masami Yokota Hirai, Fujiko Sakai, Yuki Shirakawa, Sumie Ohbu, Tomoko Abe

Heavy-ion beam, a type of ionizing radiation, has been applied to plant breeding as a powerful mutagen and is a promising tool to induce large deletions and chromosomal rearrangements. The effectiveness of heavy-ion irradiation can be explained by linear energy transfer (LET; keV µm-1). Heavy-ion beams with different LET values induce different types and sizes of mutations. It has been suggested that deletion size increases with increasing LET value, and complex chromosomal rearrangements are induced in higher LET radiations. In this study, we mapped heavy-ion beam-induced deletions detected in Arabidopsis mutants to its genome. We revealed that deletion sizes were similar between different LETs (100 to 290 keV μm-1), that their upper limit was affected by the distribution of essential genes, and that the detected chromosomal rearrangements avoid disrupting the essential genes. We also focused on tandemly arrayed genes (TAGs), where two or more homologous genes are adjacent to one another in the genome. Our results suggested that 100 keV µm-1 of LET is enough to disrupt TAGs and that the distribution of essential genes strongly affects the heritability of mutations overlapping them. Our results provide a genomic view of large deletion inductions in the Arabidopsis genome.

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