Literature DB >> 15910333

Crop-to-weed introgression has impacted allelic composition of johnsongrass populations with and without recent exposure to cultivated sorghum.

P L Morrell1, T D Williams-Coplin, A L Lattu, J E Bowers, J M Chandler, A H Paterson.   

Abstract

Sorghum halepense L. (johnsongrass) is one of the world's most noxious weeds, and a paradigm for the potential dangers of crop-weed hybridization. Introduced into the southeastern United States about 200 years ago, S. halepense is a close relative of cultivated sorghum (Sorghum bicolor). Both artificial crossing and experimental field studies have demonstrated the potential for S. halepensex S. bicolor hybrid formation, but no prior study has addressed the long-term persistence of sorghum genes in johnsongrass populations. We surveyed 283 loci (on all 10 sorghum linkage groups) to identify 77 alleles at 69 loci that are found in US sorghum cultivars but are absent from a worldwide sampling of johnsongrass genotypes. These putatively cultivar-specific alleles were present in up to 32.3% of individuals in johnsongrass populations adjacent to long-term sorghum production fields in Texas and Nebraska. Lower frequencies of cultivar-specific alleles at smaller numbers of loci are found in johnsongrass populations from New Jersey and Georgia with no recent exposure to cultivated sorghum, suggesting that introgressed sorghum alleles may be dispersed across long distances. The number of cultivar-specific alleles and extensive multilocus patterns of cultivar-specific allelic composition observed at both linked and unlinked loci in the johnsongrass populations, are inconsistent with alternatives to introgression such as convergence, or joint retention of ancestral polymorphisms. Naturalized johnsongrass populations appear to provide a conduit by which transgenes from sorghum could become widely disseminated.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15910333     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02579.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  18 in total

Review 1.  A genomic view of introgression and hybrid speciation.

Authors:  Eric J Baack; Loren H Rieseberg
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2007-10-22       Impact factor: 5.578

2.  Reduced weed seed shattering by silencing a cultivated rice gene: strategic mitigation for escaped transgenes.

Authors:  Huanxin Yan; Lei Li; Ping Liu; Xiaoqi Jiang; Lei Wang; Jia Fang; Zhimin Lin; Feng Wang; Jun Su; Bao-Rong Lu
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2017-05-19       Impact factor: 2.788

Review 3.  The red queen in the corn: agricultural weeds as models of rapid adaptive evolution.

Authors:  C C Vigueira; K M Olsen; A L Caicedo
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2012-11-28       Impact factor: 3.821

4.  Pollen-mediated transfer of herbicide resistance between johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense) biotypes.

Authors:  Aniruddha Maity; Blake Young; Nithya Subramanian; Muthukumar Bagavathiannan
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-05-10       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  The Sorghum bicolor genome and the diversification of grasses.

Authors:  Andrew H Paterson; John E Bowers; Rémy Bruggmann; Inna Dubchak; Jane Grimwood; Heidrun Gundlach; Georg Haberer; Uffe Hellsten; Therese Mitros; Alexander Poliakov; Jeremy Schmutz; Manuel Spannagl; Haibao Tang; Xiyin Wang; Thomas Wicker; Arvind K Bharti; Jarrod Chapman; F Alex Feltus; Udo Gowik; Igor V Grigoriev; Eric Lyons; Christopher A Maher; Mihaela Martis; Apurva Narechania; Robert P Otillar; Bryan W Penning; Asaf A Salamov; Yu Wang; Lifang Zhang; Nicholas C Carpita; Michael Freeling; Alan R Gingle; C Thomas Hash; Beat Keller; Patricia Klein; Stephen Kresovich; Maureen C McCann; Ray Ming; Daniel G Peterson; Doreen Ware; Peter Westhoff; Klaus F X Mayer; Joachim Messing; Daniel S Rokhsar
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-01-29       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Novel Phr1 mutations and the evolution of phenol reaction variation in US weedy rice (Oryza sativa).

Authors:  Briana L Gross; Karl J Skare; Kenneth M Olsen
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2009-07-21       Impact factor: 10.151

7.  Efficient, reproducible Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of sorghum using heat treatment of immature embryos.

Authors:  Songul Gurel; Ekrem Gurel; Rajvinder Kaur; Joshua Wong; Ling Meng; Han-Qi Tan; Peggy G Lemaux
Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2008-12-30       Impact factor: 4.570

8.  Use of multicopy transposons bearing unfitness genes in weed control: four example scenarios.

Authors:  Jonathan Gressel; Avraham A Levy
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2014-05-12       Impact factor: 8.340

9.  Crops gone wild: evolution of weeds and invasives from domesticated ancestors.

Authors:  Norman C Ellstrand; Sylvia M Heredia; Janet A Leak-Garcia; Joanne M Heraty; Jutta C Burger; Li Yao; Sahar Nohzadeh-Malakshah; Caroline E Ridley
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 5.183

10.  The genomic signature of crop-wild introgression in maize.

Authors:  Matthew B Hufford; Pesach Lubinksy; Tanja Pyhäjärvi; Michael T Devengenzo; Norman C Ellstrand; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2013-05-09       Impact factor: 5.917

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.