Literature DB >> 31069858

Parallels between natural selection in the cold-adapted crop-wild relative Tripsacum dactyloides and artificial selection in temperate adapted maize.

Lang Yan1,2,3, Sunil K Kenchanmane Raju1, Xianjun Lai1,2,4, Yang Zhang1, Xiuru Dai1, Oscar Rodriguez5, Samira Mahboub1,6, Rebecca L Roston1,6, James C Schnable1,5.   

Abstract

Artificial selection has produced varieties of domesticated maize that thrive in temperate climates around the world. However, the direct progenitor of maize, teosinte, is indigenous only to a relatively small range of tropical and subtropical latitudes and grows poorly or not at all outside of this region. Tripsacum, a sister genus to maize and teosinte, is naturally endemic to the majority of areas in the western hemisphere where maize is cultivated. A full-length reference transcriptome for Tripsacum dactyloides generated using long-read Iso-Seq data was used to characterize independent adaptation to temperate climates in this clade. Genes related to phospholipid biosynthesis, a critical component of cold acclimation in other cold-adapted plant lineages, were enriched among those genes experiencing more rapid rates of protein sequence evolution in T. dactyloides. In contrast with previous studies of parallel selection, we find that there is a significant overlap between the genes that were targets of artificial selection during the adaptation of maize to temperate climates and those that were targets of natural selection in temperate-adapted T. dactyloides. Genes related to growth, development, response to stimulus, signaling, and organelles were enriched in the set of genes identified as both targets of natural and artificial selection.
© 2019 The Authors The Plant Journal © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptation; cold tolerance; crop wild relatives; maize; parallel evolution

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31069858     DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14376

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant J        ISSN: 0960-7412            Impact factor:   6.417


  4 in total

1.  An adaptive teosinte mexicana introgression modulates phosphatidylcholine levels and is associated with maize flowering time.

Authors:  Allison C Barnes; Fausto Rodríguez-Zapata; Karla A Juárez-Núñez; Daniel J Gates; Garrett M Janzen; Andi Kur; Li Wang; Sarah E Jensen; Juan M Estévez-Palmas; Taylor M Crow; Heli S Kavi; Hannah D Pil; Ruthie L Stokes; Kevan T Knizner; Maria R Aguilar-Rangel; Edgar Demesa-Arévalo; Tara Skopelitis; Sergio Pérez-Limón; Whitney L Stutts; Peter Thompson; Yu-Chun Chiu; David Jackson; David C Muddiman; Oliver Fiehn; Daniel Runcie; Edward S Buckler; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra; Matthew B Hufford; Ruairidh J H Sawers; Rubén Rellán-Álvarez
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 12.779

2.  Genome sequencing reveals evidence of adaptive variation in the genus Zea.

Authors:  Lu Chen; Jingyun Luo; Minliang Jin; Ning Yang; Xiangguo Liu; Yong Peng; Wenqiang Li; Alyssa Phillips; Brenda Cameron; Julio S Bernal; Rubén Rellán-Álvarez; Ruairidh J H Sawers; Qing Liu; Yuejia Yin; Xinnan Ye; Jiali Yan; Qinghua Zhang; Xiaoting Zhang; Shenshen Wu; Songtao Gui; Wenjie Wei; Yuebin Wang; Yun Luo; Chenglin Jiang; Min Deng; Min Jin; Liumei Jian; Yanhui Yu; Maolin Zhang; Xiaohong Yang; Matthew B Hufford; Alisdair R Fernie; Marilyn L Warburton; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra; Jianbing Yan
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2022-10-20       Impact factor: 41.307

3.  IsoSeq transcriptome assembly of C3 panicoid grasses provides tools to study evolutionary change in the Panicoideae.

Authors:  Daniel S Carvalho; Aime V Nishimwe; James C Schnable
Journal:  Plant Direct       Date:  2020-02-28

4.  Evolutionary Dynamics of Transposable Elements Following a Shared Polyploidization Event in the Tribe Andropogoneae.

Authors:  Dhanushya Ramachandran; Michael R McKain; Elizabeth A Kellogg; Jennifer S Hawkins
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 3.154

  4 in total

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