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Barley landraces are characterized by geographically heterogeneous genomic origins
Authors:Ana M Poets  Zhou Fang  Michael T Clegg  Peter L Morrell
Institution:Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108 USA ;Current address, Bayer CropScience, 407 Davis Drive, Morrisville, NC 27560 USA ;Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697 USA
Abstract:BackgroundThe genetic provenance of domesticated plants and the routes along which they were disseminated in prehistory have been a long-standing source of debate. Much of this debate has focused on identifying centers of origins for individual crops. However, many important crops show clear genetic signatures of multiple domestications, inconsistent with geographically circumscribed centers of origin. To better understand the genetic contributions of wild populations to domesticated barley, we compare single nucleotide polymorphism frequencies from 803 barley landraces to 277 accessions from wild populations.ResultsWe find that the genetic contribution of individual wild populations differs across the genome. Despite extensive human movement and admixture of barley landraces since domestication, individual landrace genomes indicate a pattern of shared ancestry with geographically proximate wild barley populations. This results in landraces with a mosaic of ancestry from multiple source populations rather than discrete centers of origin. We rule out recent introgression, suggesting that these contributions are ancient. The over-representation in landraces of genomic segments from local wild populations suggests that wild populations contributed locally adaptive variation to primitive varieties.ConclusionsThis study increases our understanding of the evolutionary process associated with the transition from wild to domesticated barley. Our findings indicate that cultivated barley is comprised of multiple source populations with unequal contributions traceable across the genome. We detect putative adaptive variants and identify the wild progenitor conferring those variants.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13059-015-0712-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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