Abstract Cotton (Gossypium hirsutumL.) is the key renewable fibre crop worldwide, yet its yield and fibre quality show high variability due to genotype-specific traits and complex interactions among cultivars, management practices and environmental factors. Modern breeding practices may limit future yield gains due to a narrow founding gene pool. Precision breeding and biotechnological approaches offer potential solutions, contingent on accurate cultivar-specific data. Here we address this need by generating high-quality reference genomes for three modern cotton cultivars (‘UGA230’, ‘UA48’ and ‘CSX8308’) and updating the ‘TM-1’ cotton genetic standard reference. Despite hypothesized genetic uniformity, considerable sequence and structural variation was observed among the four genomes, which overlap with ancient and ongoing genomic introgressions from ‘Pima’ cotton, gene regulatory mechanisms and phenotypic trait divergence. Differentially expressed genes across fibre development correlate with fibre production, potentially contributing to the distinctive fibre quality traits observed in modern cotton cultivars. These genomes and comparative analyses provide a valuable foundation for future genetic endeavours to enhance global cotton yield and sustainability. 
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                            Regulation of a single inositol 1‐phosphate synthase homeologue by HSFA6B contributes to fibre yield maintenance under drought conditions in upland cotton
                        
                    
    
            Summary Drought stress substantially impacts crop physiology resulting in alteration of growth and productivity. Understanding the genetic and molecular crosstalk between stress responses and agronomically important traits such as fibre yield is particularly complicated in the allopolyploid species, upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), due to reduced sequence variability between A and D subgenomes. To better understand how drought stress impacts yield, the transcriptomes of 22 genetically and phenotypically diverse upland cotton accessions grown under well‐watered and water‐limited conditions in the Arizona low desert were sequenced. Gene co‐expression analyses were performed, uncovering a group of stress response genes, in particular transcription factors GhDREB2A‐A and GhHSFA6B‐D, associated with improved yield under water‐limited conditions in an ABA‐independent manner. DNA affinity purification sequencing (DAP‐seq), as well as public cistrome data from Arabidopsis, were used to identify targets of these two TFs. Among these targets were two lint yield‐associated genes previously identified through genome‐wide association studies (GWAS)‐based approaches,GhABP‐DandGhIPS1‐A. Biochemical and phylogenetic approaches were used to determine thatGhIPS1‐Ais positively regulated by GhHSFA6B‐D, and that this regulatory mechanism is specific toGossypiumspp. containing the A (old world) genome. Finally, an SNP was identified within the GhHSFA6B‐D binding site inGhIPS1‐Athat is positively associated with yield under water‐limiting conditions. These data lay out a regulatory connection between abiotic stress and fibre yield in cotton that appears conserved in other systems such as Arabidopsis. 
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                            - PAR ID:
- 10516529
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Plant Biotechnology Journal
- Volume:
- 22
- Issue:
- 10
- ISSN:
- 1467-7644
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: p. 2756-2772
- Size(s):
- p. 2756-2772
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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