Tek, Ahmet L.Nagaki, KiyotakaYıldız Akkamış, HümeyraTanaka, KeisukeKobayashi, Hisato2024-11-072024-11-0720242575-1077https://doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202402802https://hdl.handle.net/11480/11530Wild soybean Glycine soja is the progenitor of cultivated soybean Glycine max. Information on soybean functional centromeres is limited despite extensive genome analysis. These species are an ideal model for studying centromere dynamics for domestication and breeding. We performed a detailed chromatin immunopre-cipitation analysis using centromere-specific histone H3 protein to delineate two distinct centromeric DNA sequences with un-usual repeating units with monomer sizes of 90–92 bp (CentGm-1) and 413-bp (CentGm-4) shorter and longer than standard nu-cleosomes. These two unrelated DNA sequences with no sequence similarity are part of functional centromeres in both species. Our results provide a comparison of centromere properties between a cultivated and a wild species under the effect of the same kinetochore protein. Possible sequence homogenization specific to each chromosome could highlight the mechanism for evolutionary conservation of centromeric properties independent of domestication and breeding. Moreover, a unique barcode system to track each chromosome is developed using CentGm-4 units. Our results with a unifying centromere composition model using CentGm-1 and CentGm-4 superfamilies could have far-reaching implications for comparative and evolutionary genome research. © 2024 Tek et al.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessCentromereChromosomes, PlantDNA Barcoding, TaxonomicDNA, PlantDomesticationGenome, PlantGlycine maxHistonesPlant Breedinghistoneplant DNAcentromereDNA barcodingdomesticationgeneticsmetabolismplant breedingplant chromosomeplant genomeproceduressoybeanChromosome-specific barcode system with centromeric repeat in cultivated soybean and wild progenitorArticle71210.26508/lsa.202402802393537382-s2.0-85205526859Q1