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21.
For millennia, chickpea (Cicer arietinum) has been grown in the Levant sympatrically with wild Cicer species. Chickpea is traditionally spring-sown, while its wild relatives germinate in the autumn and develop in the winter. It has been hypothesized that the human-directed shift of domesticated chickpea to summer production was an attempt to escape the devastating Ascochyta disease caused by Didymella rabiei. We estimated genetic divergence between D. rabiei isolates sampled from wild Cicer judaicum and domesticated C. arietinum and the potential role of temperature adaptation in this divergence. Neutral genetic markers showed strong differentiation between pathogen samples from the two hosts. Isolates from domesticated chickpea demonstrated increased adaptation to higher temperatures when grown in vitro compared with isolates from the wild host. The distribution of temperature responses among progeny from crosses of isolates from C. judaicum with isolates from C. arietinum was continuous, suggesting polygenic control of this trait. In vivo inoculations of host plants indicated that pathogenic fitness of the native isolates was higher than that of their hybrid progeny. The results indicate that there is a potential for adaptation to higher temperatures; however, the chances for formation of hybrids which are capable of parasitizing both hosts over a broad temperature range are low. We hypothesize that this pathogenic fitness cost is due to breakdown of coadapted gene complexes controlling pathogenic fitness on each host and may be responsible for maintenance of genetic differentiation between the pathogen demes.Environmental heterogeneity and genetic variability in host populations are major factors distinguishing natural from agricultural habitats. These differences exert powerful selective forces on plants and their pathogens, shaping the biology of pathosystems, epidemiological patterns, and pathogenic fitness (11, 21). Plant pathogens are dependent upon the abiotic environment as well as on their host plants and are subjected to strong selective forces exerted by their hosts. This process is shaped especially (but not exclusively) by genetic variation at loci controlling differential host specificity, which may ultimately be an important driver in speciation (37, 48, 49).The Neolithic revolution and the adoption of farming have had a large impact on plant communities as well as their related pathogens (11, 34, 57). The long-term interplay between plant pathogens and their hosts and the resulting evolutionary trajectories may have different patterns in natural plant communities as compared to agro-ecosystems (12). One striking observation is that pathogens of natural plant populations, although prevalent, rarely cause the destruction of their hosts (21). Therefore, investigations of the epidemiological and biological differences between pathogen populations from wild and domesticated origins are of fundamental interest and are highly relevant to understanding disease patterns, parasite evolution, and host resistance in agricultural systems. Such studies are expected to be especially fruitful in the centers of origin of crop species, because these regions are generally considered to be pathogen centers of origin as well (40, 57).Throughout West Asia, wild cereals and legumes and their domesticated derivatives have been growing sympatrically since the beginning of Near Eastern farming systems (41, 61). Domesticated chickpea, Cicer arietinum L, is grown sympatrically with a number of annual and perennial Cicer relatives, including the immediate wild progenitor of domesticated chickpea, C. reticulatum Ladiz (39, 58). Following the Neolithic agricultural revolution in southeastern Turkey (41), the Near Eastern crop package spread in all directions throughout the east Mediterranean and reached the southern Levant within 1 millennium (2, 3). This “passage” of the cultigens, from their core region in southeast Turkey into the southern Levant, traversed populations of many of their wild progenitors and more distantly related wild relatives (e.g., wild barley, wild emmer wheat, wild bitter vetch, wild lentils, and wild peas), (2, 3). Presumably, these natural populations were infested by pathogens capable of infecting the domesticated forms (2, 20, 24).Domesticated chickpea differs from the Near Eastern founder crops in its seasonal growth pattern. While most founder crops have retained the autumnal germination/spring maturation cycle like their wild relatives, domesticated chickpea is a spring-sown crop, germinating and developing up to 4 months later than its wild relatives (1, 3). This shift of life cycle is puzzling since water availability in the Levant is a major yield-limiting factor and autumn-sown crops enjoy a substantial yield benefit. It has been recently hypothesized that this shift was driven by the extreme vulnerability of chickpea to Ascochyta blight during the rainy season and was the only means to secure stable yields in ancient times (3). Didymella rabiei (Kovachevski) var. Arx. (Anamorph: Ascochyta rabiei (Pass) Labr.) is one of the most destructive diseases of domesticated chickpea, affecting all above-ground parts of the plant. Secondary spread of D. rabiei conidia occurs through rain splash, and epidemic intensity is governed by rain frequency and quantity. As Ascochyta blight epidemics proceed, foci of diseased plants become visible. Unlike other Ascochyta diseases of legumes and Septoria diseases of cereals, Ascochyta blight of chickpea may cause total yield loss under the appropriate environmental conditions (43). Autumn-sown chickpea is severely affected by Ascochyta blight because the crop growth period coincides with the rainy season and optimum environmental conditions for pathogen development and spread (3, 56).Unlike the often massive stands of wild cereals, C. reticulatum has a very narrow and fragmented distribution (2, 8, 38). However, other wild annual Cicer taxa are more common across the region and can be found in close proximity to the domesticated crop (1, 8). In the southern Levant, domesticated chickpea is grown sympatrically, often just few meters apart from C. judaicum (27). C. judaicum grows in patchy distributions in stony/rocky habitats in Israel and neighboring territories, mostly in sites with annual precipitation of >480 mm and altitude of <900 m (6). Unlike C. judaicum, modern chickpea cropping in Israel spans large tracts of land employing a 5-year rotation in individual fields. Recently, D. rabiei isolates sampled from C. judaicum and isolates sampled from C. arietinum were studied and found to be better adapted to their respective original host than to the other Cicer species (26, 27). In addition, in vitro hyphal growth rate experiments exposed an adaptation to higher temperatures among isolates originating from C. arietinum compared to isolates from C. judaicum (26). Given that the natural growing season of C. judaicum occurs during the Levantine winter and that chickpea is a traditional spring-sown crop in the region, it is likely that the apparent adaptation to higher temperatures of D. rabiei isolates from domesticated chickpea may represent an ecological shift following the introduction of summer cropping practices in the Near East (3). These sympatric wild and domesticated pathosystems of Cicer/Ascochyta represent a unique opportunity for studying the genetic basis of the pathogen''s ecological adaptation and its association with pathogenic fitness. Such a system may also help to determine the role of ecological factors and pathogenic fitness in pathogenic divergence and the evolutionary relationships among pathogen populations in natural and human-directed agro-ecosystems (57).In this context, our underlying hypotheses were as follows: (i) isolates sampled from C. arietinum and C. judaicum are conspecific but represent genetically distinct populations; (ii) the temperature growth response of D. rabiei isolates from C. judaicum and C. arietinum has a heritable genetic basis; (iii) the temperature growth response plays an important role in the ongoing pathogen divergence process and, therefore, it is expected to have high heritability values; and (iv) the existence of two sympatric D. rabiei populations (demes) requires the action of one or more genetic isolation mechanisms. In accord with the above hypotheses, the aims of this study were (i) to assess the genetic differentiation between D. rabiei isolates originating from C. judaicum versus C. arietinum, (ii) to determine the genetic basis of temperature response and estimate its heritability, and (iii) to assess the relationship between temperature adaptation and pathogenic fitness among progeny from crosses between D. rabiei isolates from C. judaicum and C. arietinum on the two original hosts.  相似文献   
22.
Demographic expansion and (or) migrations leave their mark in the pattern of DNA polymorphisms of the respective populations. Likewise, the spread of cultural phenomena can be traced by dating archaeological finds and reconstructing their direction and pace. A similar course of events is likely to have taken place following the "Big Bang" of the agricultural spread in the Neolithic Near East from its core area in southeastern Turkey. Thus far, no attempts have been made to track the movement of the founder genetic stocks of the first crop plants from their core area based on the genetic structure of living plants. In this minireview, we re-interpret recent wheat DNA polymorphism data to detect the genetic ripples left by the early wave of advance of Neolithic wheat farming from its core area. This methodology may help to suggest a model charting the spread of the first farming phase prior to the emergence of truly domesticated wheat types (and other such crops), thereby increasing our resolution power in studying this revolutionary period of human cultural, demographic, and social evolution.  相似文献   
23.
Understanding the evolutionary history of crop plants is fundamental to our understanding of their respective adaptation profiles, which in turn, is a key element in securing future yield and quality improvement. Central topics in this field concern the mono- or polyphyletic origin of crop plants, and our ability to identify the geographic location where certain crop plants have originated. Understanding the geographical pattern of domestication may also assist in reconstructing the cultural processes underlying the Neolithic (agricultural) Revolution. Here we review prevailing views on the geographic pattern of Near Eastern plant domestication, and highlight the distinction between genetic domestication events and independent cultural events. A critical evaluation of the wealth of newly published geobotanical, genetic, and archaeological data provides strong support in favor of a specific core area in southeastern Turkey where most, if not all, founder Near Eastern crops were likely domesticated.  相似文献   
24.

Background and Aims

The harvesting method of wild and cultivated cereals has long been recognized as an important factor in the emergence of domesticated non-shattering ear genotypes. This study aimed to quantify the effects of spike brittleness and threshability on threshing time and efficiency in emmer wheat, and to evaluate the implications of post-harvest processes on domestication of cereals in the Near East.

Methods

A diverse collection of tetraploid wheat genotypes, consisting of Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides – the wild progenitor of domesticated wheat – traditional landraces, modern cultivars (T. turgidum ssp. durum) and 150 recombinant (wild × modern) inbred lines, was used in replicated controlled threshing experiments to quantify the effects of spike brittleness and threshability on threshing time and efficiency.

Key Results

The transition from a brittle hulled wild phenotype to non-brittle hulled phenotype (landraces) was associated with an approx. 30 % reduction in threshing time, whereas the transition from the latter to non-brittle free-threshing cultivars was associated with an approx. 85 % reduction in threshing time. Similar trends were obtained with groups of recombinant inbred lines showing extreme phenotypes of brittleness and threshability.

Conclusions

In tetraploid wheat, both non-brittle spike and free-threshing are labour-saving traits that increase the efficiency of post-harvest processing, which could have been an incentive for rapid domestication of the Near Eastern cereals, thus refuting the recently proposed hypothesis regarding extra labour associated with the domesticated phenotype (non-brittle spike) and its presumed role in extending the domestication episode time frame.  相似文献   
25.
Summary A new case of 46XX/47XX 18+mosaicism is presented and the clinical findings of this type of mosaicism are discussed with particular emphasis on congenital asymmetry and elevation of sweat chlorides.
Zusammenfassung Chromosomale Mosaiken 46/47, 18+sind sehr selten; nur acht solche Fälle sind bisher beobachtet worden. Ein neunter Fall wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit beschrieben. Die Symptomatologie dieser Chromosomenanomalie — derjenigen der Trisomie 18 sehr ähnlich — wird besprochen, wobei besonders darauf hingewiesen wird, daß der Patient leicht erhöhte Chloride im Schweiß und eine auffallende Körperasymmetrie aufwies. Körperasymmetrien sind schon mehrfach bei 46/47, 18+Mosaik beobachtet worden. Eine kausale Beziehung zwischen dieser Chromosomenanomalie und der Körperasymmetrie wird diskutiert.


Supplemented by a fellowship of NATO (Dr. L. Pavone) and a Special Project Budget MR 12, HEW, Children's Bureau, Clinical Research in Mental Retardation and Genetic Study.  相似文献   
26.
Simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers have become a major tool in population genetic analyses. The anonymous genomic SSRs (gSSRs) have been recently supplemented with expressed sequence tag (EST) derived SSRs (eSSRs), which represent the transcribed regions of the genome. In the present study, we used 8 populations of wild emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum subsp. dicoccoides) to compare the usefulness of the two types of SSR markers in assessing allelic diversity and population structure. gSSRs revealed significantly higher diversity than eSSRs in terms of average number of alleles (14.92 vs. 7.4, respectively), polymorphic information content (0.87 vs. 0.68, respectively), and gene diversity (He; 0.55 vs. 0.38, respectively). Despite the overall differences in the level of diversity, Mantel tests for correlations between eSSR and gSSR pairwise genetic distances were found to be significant for each population as well as for all accessions jointly (RM=0.54, p=0.01). Various genetic structure analyses (AMOVA, PCoA, STRUCTURE, unrooted UPGMA tree) revealed a better capacity of eSSRs to distinguish between populations, while gSSRs showed a higher proportion of intrapopulation (among accessions) diversity. We conclude that eSSR and gSSR markers should be employed in conjunction to obtain a high inter- and intra-specific (or inter- and intra-varietal) distinctness.  相似文献   
27.
The widely accepted models describing the emergence of domesticated grain crops from their wild type ancestors are mostly based upon selection (conscious or unconscious) of major features related either to seed dispersal (nonbrittle ear, indehiscent pod) or free germination (nondormant seeds, soft seed coat). Based on the breeding systems (self-pollination) and dominance relations between the allelomorphs of seed dispersal mode and seed dormancy, it was postulated that establishment of the domesticated forms and replacement of the wild ancestral populations occurred in the Near East within a relatively short time. Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), however, appears as an exception among all other "founder crops" of Old World agriculture because of its ancient conversion into a summer crop. The chickpea is also exceptional because its major domestication trait appears to be vernalization insensitivity rather than pod indehiscence or free germination. Moreover, the genetic basis of vernalization response in wild chickpea (Cicer reticulatum Ladiz.) is polygenic, suggesting that a long domestication process was imperative due to the elusive phenotype of vernalization nonresponsiveness. There is also a gap in chickpea remains in the archaeological record between the Late Prepottery Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age. Contrary to the common view that Levantine summer cropping was introduced relatively late (Early Bronze Age), we argue for an earlier (Neolithic) Levantine origin of summer cropping because chickpea, when grown as a common winter crop, was vulnerable to the devastating pathogen Didymella rabiei, the causal agent of Ascochyta blight. The ancient (Neolithic) conversion of chickpea into a summer crop required seasonal differentiation of agronomic operation from the early phases of the Neolithic revolution. This topic is difficult to deal with, as direct data on seasonality in prehistoric Old World field crop husbandry are practically nonexistent. Consequently, this issue was hardly dealt with in the literature. Information on the seasonality of ancient (Neolithic, Chalcolithic, and Early Bronze Age, calibrated 11,500 to 4,500 years before present) Near Eastern agriculture may improve our understanding of the proficiency of early farmers. This in turn may provide a better insight into Neolithic agrotechniques and scheduling. It is difficult to fully understand chickpea domestication without a Neolithic seasonal differentiation of agronomic practice because the rapid establishment of the successful Near Eastern crop package which included wheats, barley, pea, lentil, vetches, and flax, would have preempted the later domestication of this rare wild legume.  相似文献   
28.
29.
Primer-induced in situ hybridization to plant chromosomes.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
S Abbo  T E Miller  I P King 《Génome》1993,36(5):815-817
Primer-induced in situ hybridization of high copy sequences was used successfully on rye mitotic chromosome spreads. Nucleolus organizer sequences were detected in rye, and the pattern obtained was in full agreement with previously reported results by conventional in situ hybridization. The future potential of the primer-induced in situ hybridization technique is briefly discussed.  相似文献   
30.
Summary Chromosomes were studied in 32 non-LSD-using controls (Group I), nine psychiatric patients treated with LSD (Group IIa), and a young married couple, both of whom had taken LSD, and their child (Group IIb). The incidence of chromosomal breaks in Groups IIa and IIb was significantly higher than that of Control Group I.  相似文献   
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