| Literature DB >> 28736485 |
Peter Civáň1, Terence A Brown1.
Abstract
A number of genes that contribute to the domestication traits of cultivated rice have been identified. These include Sh4, Rc, PROG1 and LABA1, which are associated with non-shattering rachis, white pericarp, erect growth and barbless awns, respectively. The mutations giving rise to the "domestication alleles" of these genes are either invariable in cultivated rice, or have variability that is strictly associated with the phenotypic trait. This observation forms the basis to those current rice domestication models that envisage a single origin for the domesticated phenotype. Such models assume that the domestication alleles are absent or rare in wild rice, emerged under cultivation and spread across all rice groups by introgressive hybridization. We examined whole-genome sequencing datasets for wild and cultivated rice to test the former two assumptions. We found that the rc and laba1 alleles occur in wild rice with broad geographical distribution, and reach frequencies as high as 13 and 15%, respectively. These results are in agreement with previous observations of the prog1 and sh4 domestication alleles in wild populations. We also show that the diversity of the genomic regions surrounding the rc, laba1, prog1 and sh4 alleles in wild accessions is greater than that in cultivated rice, suggesting that these alleles emerged prior to domestication. Our findings indicate that the possibility that independent rice groups obtained identical domestication alleles directly from the wild population needs to be considered.Entities:
Keywords: Cultivated rice; Domestication genes; Origins of cultivation; Oryza sativa; Whole-genome sequence data; Wild rice
Year: 2017 PMID: 28736485 PMCID: PMC5498617 DOI: 10.1007/s10722-017-0518-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Resour Crop Evol ISSN: 0925-9864 Impact factor: 1.524
Summary of the Rc and LABA1 alleles detected in cultivated groups and wild populations
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| subsp. | 7 (31.8%) | 15 (68.2%) | 0.42 | 0 | 24 (100%) | 0.44 |
| subsp. | 15 (11.6%) | 114 (88.4%) | 50 (58.1%) | 36 (41.9%) | ||
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| 65 (28.5%) | 167 (73.2%) | 3 (2.3%) | 130 (97.7%) | ||
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| 7 (100%) | 0 | 8 (66.7%) | 4 (33.3%) | ||
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| 0 | 2 (100%) | 0 | 3 (100%) | ||
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| 218 (87.2%) | 33 (13.2%) | 1.69 | 185 (86.0%) | 33 (15.3%) | 2.07 |
aFour subsp. indica accessions were found with both Rc alleles (heterozygotes)
bOne O. rufipogon accession was found with both Rc alleles, while three accessions had matches with both LABA1 alleles
Fig. 1Geographic location of O. rufipogon accessions with the rc (a) and laba1 (b) alleles. In both cases, two Chinese samples are not shown due to unavailable coordinates. Map prepared in Google Earth v7.1.5.1557
Fig. 2Maximum-parsimony tree constructed from the sh4 haplotype data published by Zhu et al. (2012). Haplotypes with the asterisk carry T at the FNP (Functional Nucleotide Polymorphism) site identified by Li et al. (2006) (chromosome 4; IRGSP4 position 34,631,527). The haplotypes H104 and H105 (blue) are only found in weedy rice. All cultivated rice carries either of the haplotypes H1 and H2 (red) that are also found in wild rice. The haplotypes H10, H11, H12, H13, H14, H15, H84, H93 and H95 are only found in wild rice. The inferred origin of the G → T FNP is indicated by an arrow. Two unrelated wild haplotypes also carry T at the FNP site (H92, H100), probably as a result of homoplasy. The haplotypes H76 and H91 probably encountered reverse T → G mutations