Wheat alleles introgress into selfing wild relatives: empirical estimates from approximate Bayesian computation in Aegilops triuncialis |
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Authors: | Christian Parisod Samuel Neuenschwander Jerome Goudet Nadir Alvarez Roberto Guadagnuolo François Felber Nils Arrigo |
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Affiliation: | 1. Laboratory of Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, , Neuchatel, CH‐2001 Switzerland;2. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, , Lausanne, CH‐1015 Switzerland;3. Vital‐IT, Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Lausanne, , Lausanne, Switzerland;4. Musée et Jardins botaniques cantonaux vaudois, , Lausanne, CH‐1007 Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Extensive gene flow between wheat (Triticum sp.) and several wild relatives of the genus Aegilops has recently been detected despite notoriously high levels of selfing in these species. Here, we assess and model the spread of wheat alleles into natural populations of the barbed goatgrass (Aegilops triuncialis), a wild wheat relative prevailing in the Mediterranean flora. Our sampling, based on an extensive survey of 31 Ae. triuncialis populations collected along a 60 km × 20 km area in southern Spain (Grazalema Mountain chain, Andalousia, totalling 458 specimens), is completed with 33 wheat cultivars representative of the European domesticated pool. All specimens were genotyped with amplified fragment length polymorphism with the aim of estimating wheat admixture levels in Ae. triuncialis populations. This survey first confirmed extensive hybridization and backcrossing of wheat into the wild species. We then used explicit modelling of populations and approximate Bayesian computation to estimate the selfing rate of Ae. triuncialis along with the magnitude, the tempo and the geographical distance over which wheat alleles introgress into Ae. triuncialis populations. These simulations confirmed that extensive introgression of wheat alleles (2.7 × 10?4 wheat immigrants for each Ae. triuncialis resident, at each generation) into Ae. triuncialis occurs despite a high selfing rate (Fis ≈ 1 and selfing rate = 97%). These results are discussed in the light of risks associated with the release of genetically modified wheat cultivars in Mediterranean agrosystems. |
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Keywords: |
ABC
admixture autogamy containment crop to wild gene flow transgene escape |
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