February 15, 2012

Independent domestication of rice varieties

Mol Biol Evol (2011) doi: 10.1093/molbev/msr315

Independent Domestication of Asian Rice Followed by Gene Flow from japonica to indica

Ching-chia Yang et al.

Results from studies on the domestication process of Asian rice Oryza sativa have been controversial because of its complicated evolutionary history. Previous studies have yielded two alternative hypotheses about the origin(s) of the two major groups of O. sativa: japonica and indica. One study proposes a single common wild ancestor, whereas the other suggests that there were multiple domestication events of different types of wild rice. Here, we provide clear evidence of the independent domestication of japonica and indica obtained via high-throughput sequencing and a large-scale comparative analysis of two wild rice accessions (W1943 and W0106) and two cultivars (a japonica cultivar called “Nipponbare” and an indica cultivar called “Guangluai-4”). The different domestication processes of the two cultivar groups appear to have led to distinct patterns of molecular evolution in protein-coding regions. The intensity of purifying selection was relaxed only in the japonica group, possibly because of a bottleneck effect. Moreover, a genome-wide comparison between Nipponbare, Guangluai-4, and another indica cultivar (93-11) suggests multiple hybridization events between japonica and indica, both before and after the divergence of the indica cultivars. We found that a large amount of genomic DNA, including domestication-related genes, was transferred from japonica to indica, which might have been important in the development of modern rice. Our study provides an overview of the dynamic process of Asian rice domestication, including independent domestication events and subsequent gene flow.

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1 comment:

  1. "Moreover, a genome-wide comparison between Nipponbare, Guangluai-4, and another indica cultivar (93-11) suggests multiple hybridization events between japonica and indica, both before and after the divergence of the indica cultivars".

    Quite likely giving rise to hybrid vigour. A friend is a biosecurity officer and he claims that research indicates most 'noxious weeds' in this country are actually hybrids formed from introductions of similar species from at least two separate regions. That is why they are so prolific and invasive. Presumaby in the early stages of domestication the hybridisation of two or more regional varieties, followed by some level of selective breeding, would have improved the domestic strains.

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