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Largely unlinked gene sets targeted by selection for domestication syndrome phenotypes in maize and sorghum
Authors:Xianjun Lai  Lang Yan  Yanli Lu  James C Schnable
Institution:1. Center for Plant Science Innovation and Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska‐Lincoln, NE, USA;2. Maize Research Institute, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, China;3. Laboratory of Functional Genome and Application of Potato, Xichang College, Liangshan, China;4. College of Life Sciences, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China
Abstract:The domestication of diverse grain crops from wild grasses was a result of artificial selection for a suite of overlapping traits producing changes referred to in aggregate as ‘domestication syndrome’. Parallel phenotypic change can be accomplished by either selection on orthologous genes or selection on non‐orthologous genes with parallel phenotypic effects. To determine how often artificial selection for domestication traits in the grasses targeted orthologous genes, we employed resequencing data from wild and domesticated accessions of Zea (maize) and Sorghum (sorghum). Many ‘classic’ domestication genes identified through quantitative trait locus mapping in populations resulting from wild/domesticated crosses indeed show signatures of parallel selection in both maize and sorghum. However, the overall number of genes showing signatures of parallel selection in both species is not significantly different from that expected by chance. This suggests that while a small number of genes will extremely large phenotypic effects have been targeted repeatedly by artificial selection during domestication, the optimization part of domestication targeted small and largely non‐overlapping subsets of all possible genes which could produce equivalent phenotypic alterations.
Keywords:grasses  domestication  selection  parallel evolution     Zea mays        Sorghum bicolor   
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