- Bornowski, Nolan;
- Michel, Kathryn J;
- Hamilton, John P;
- Ou, Shujun;
- Seetharam, Arun S;
- Jenkins, Jerry;
- Grimwood, Jane;
- Plott, Chris;
- Shu, Shengqiang;
- Talag, Jayson;
- Kennedy, Megan;
- Hundley, Hope;
- Singan, Vasanth R;
- Barry, Kerrie;
- Daum, Chris;
- Yoshinaga, Yuko;
- Schmutz, Jeremy;
- Hirsch, Candice N;
- Hufford, Matthew B;
- de Leon, Natalia;
- Kaeppler, Shawn M;
- Buell, C Robin
The stiff-stalk heterotic group in Maize (Zea mays L.) is an important source of inbreds used in U.S. commercial hybrid production. Founder inbreds B14, B37, B73, and, to a lesser extent, B84, are found in the pedigrees of a majority of commercial seed parent inbred lines. We created high-quality genome assemblies of B84 and four expired Plant Variety Protection (ex-PVP) lines LH145 representing B14, NKH8431 of mixed descent, PHB47 representing B37, and PHJ40, which is a Pioneer Hi-Bred International (PHI) early stiff-stalk type. Sequence was generated using long-read sequencing achieving highly contiguous assemblies of 2.13-2.18 Gbp with N50 scaffold lengths >200 Mbp. Inbred-specific gene annotations were generated using a core five-tissue gene expression atlas, whereas transposable element (TE) annotation was conducted using de novo and homology-directed methodologies. Compared with the reference inbred B73, synteny analyses revealed extensive collinearity across the five stiff-stalk genomes, although unique components of the maize pangenome were detected. Comparison of this set of stiff-stalk inbreds with the original Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic breeding population revealed that these inbreds represent only a proportion of variation in the original stiff-stalk pool and there are highly conserved haplotypes in released public and ex-Plant Variety Protection inbreds. Despite the reduction in variation from the original stiff-stalk population, substantial genetic and genomic variation was identified supporting the potential for continued breeding success in this pool. The assemblies described here represent stiff-stalk inbreds that have historical and commercial relevance and provide further insight into the emerging maize pangenome.