Abstract

Superior inbred lines are central to maize breeding as sources of natural variation. Although many elite lines have been sequenced, less sequencing attention has been paid to newly developed lines. We constructed a genome assembly of the elite inbred line KA105, which has recently been developed by an artificial breeding population named Shaan A and has shown desirable characteristics for breeding. Its pedigree showed genetic divergence from B73 and other lines in its pedigree. Comparison with the B73 reference genome revealed extensive structural variation, 58 presence/absence variation (PAV) genes, and 1023 expanded gene families, some of which may be associated with disease resistance. A network-based integrative analysis of stress-induced transcriptomes identified 13 KA105-specific PAV genes, of which eight were induced by at least one kind of stress, participating in gene modules responding to stress such as drought and southern leaf blight disease. More than 200,000 gene pairs were differentially correlated between KA105 and B73 during kernel development. The KA105 reference genome and transcriptome atlas are a resource for further germplasm improvement and surveys of maize genomic variation and gene function.

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