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Parallel microgeographic patterns of genetic diversity and divergence revealed by allozyme, RAPD, and microsatellites in Triticum dicoccoides at Ammiad, Israel
Authors:You-Chun Li  Tzion Fahima  Tamar Krugman  Avigdor Beiles  Marion S Röder  Abraham B Korol  Eviatar Nevo
Institution:(1) Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa, 31905, Israel;;(2) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA;(3) Institute for Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research, Corrensstrasse 3, 06466 Gatersleben, Germany;(4) Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa, 31905, Israel
Abstract:The levels of genetic diversity were compared by means of 35 allozyme, 60 RAPD, and 25 microsatellite (SSR) markers for 75–175 individuals of tetraploid wild emmer wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) collected in 1993 from a microgeographic microsite, Ammiad, north of the Sea of Galilee, Israel. This microsite included four major habitats, which showed highly significant differentiation in ecological factors, in particular with respect to rock cover, proximity and height, and surface soil moisture in the early growing season of T. dicoccoides. Higher within-subpopulation genetic diversity was found in the primarily non-coding DNA regions (RAPD and SSR) rather than in the protein-coding (allozymes) regions. However, much larger gene differentiation (G ST) among the subpopulations was observed in the protein-coding allozymes than in the RAPDs and SSRs. Larger genetic distance was found at SSR loci, followed by allozyme and RAPD loci. The subpopulations in drier habitats tend to have higher allozyme, RAPD and SSR diversities (He), the relatively wet Karst subpopulation showed only about half He of the other relatively drier habitats. The subpopulations with larger difference of soil moisture between habitats tend to show larger genetic distances at allozyme, RAPD and SSR loci. These results suggest that climatic selection through aridity stress may be an important factor acting on both structural protein-coding and presumably partly regulatory non-coding DNA regions, resulting in microscale adaptive patterns, although hitchhiking and random drift may also intervene. These results have profound implications for genetic conservation both in situ and ex situ.
Keywords:allozyme  microgeographic divergence  microsatellite  natural selection  RAPD  Triticum dicoccoides  wild emmer wheat
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