How did plants evolve under domestication? Fate of genetic
diversity
Or: Why are the British tea drinkers? Why is the basketball
team in Boston called the Celtics?
© Paul Gepts 2006
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PLB143: Readings - Lecture 15
- Required:
- Additional readings:
- Buckler E, Thornsberry J and Kresovich S (2001) Molecular diversity, structure, and domestication of grasses. Genetical Research 77:213-218
- Crow JF, Kimura M (1970) An introduction to population
genetics theory. Harper & Row, NY
- Duvick DN (1984) Genetic diversity in major farm crops
on the farm and in reserve. Econ. Bot. 38: 161-178
- Hargrove TR, Coffman WR, Cabanilla VL (1979) Genetic
interrelationships of improved rice varieties in Asia. IRRI Reseach
Paper Series No. 23
- Hobhouse H (1986) Seeds of change. Harper & Row, NY
- Hoyt E (1988) Conserving the wild relatives of crops.
International Board Plant Genet. Res., Rome
- Saghai Maroof MA, Soliman, KM, Jorgensen RA, Allard RW
(1984) Ribosomal DNA spacer-length polymorphisms in barley, Mendelian
inheritance, chromosomal location, and population dynamics. Proc. Nat.
Acad. Sci. 81: 8014-8018
- Presentation slides
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Lecture 15 Plan
- Major directions in crop evolution research
- What is genetic diversity and how do we measure it?
- Uncoupling of trends in genetic diversity at the molecular
and phenotypic levels. How do we explain that?
- Why is genetic diversity important? The case of disease
resistance
- How diverse or uniform are our crops?
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Two major directions in crop evolution research
- Search for the ancestor
- First part of the course
- Traditional goal of crop evolution studies
- Evolution under domestication
- Compare wild progenitor and cultivated descendant
- This lecture and the 2 following ones will deal with
differences that have appeared under domestication: genetic diversity,
phenotype differences and their genetic control, and physiological and
ecological differences.
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Search for the ancestor•
- Agriculture is a prerequisite for the development of civilizations
- Multiple origins of agriculture
- Conditions promoting switch to agriculture
- •Centers of domestication
- •Each center with its own assemblage of crops
- •Fully domesticated crops cannot survive in the wild
- •Domestication syndrome
- •Some have characteristics of weeds
- •Role of hybridization
- •Humans were not the first ones!
- •Multidisciplinary approach
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The domestication process
- Definition:
- Selection process for adaptation to the human
(cultivated) environment (farmers and consumers)
- Stages:
- initial domestication
- dispersal within the region of domestication
- long-range dispersal
- Effects on genetic diversity?
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What is genetic diversity?
- Types of traits
- growth habit
- disease and pest resistances
- tolerance to abiotic stresses
- quality
- harvest index and yield
- Types of plant materials
- Gene pools: I, II, III, IV (see Lecture 5 )
- Primary gene pool
- wild progenitor, landraces, obsolete cultivars,
advanced
breeding lines, modern cultivars
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How do we measure genetic diversity?
- Morphological (phenotypic) traits
- usually of agronomic importance:
- growth habit, seed size and shape
- phenology
- problem: gene expression
- Molecular markers
- see Lecture 5: RFLP, RAPD
- problem: more cumbersome
- Contrasting results
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Experiments to measure evolution of genetic diversity at the
molecular level
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- Chloroplast
DNA in various species (Doebley 1992)
- Cereal diversity (Buckler et al. 2001)
- M13-homologous
sequences in common-bean (Sonnante et al. 1994)
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- Chloroplast DNA
- Cereal nuclear sequence diversity
Pdf file
- RFLPs for M13-related sequences
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Relative genetic uniformity of major U.S. crops
(National Research Council 1972)
| Crop |
Acreage
(millions) |
Value
(millions) |
Total no. var. |
Major var. |
Acreage (%) |
| Beans, dry |
1.4 |
143 |
25 |
2 |
60 |
| Beans, snap |
0.3 |
99 |
70 |
3 |
76 |
| Cotton |
11.2 |
120 |
50 |
3 |
53 |
| Maize |
66.3 |
5200 |
197 |
6 |
71 |
| Peanut |
1.4 |
312 |
15 |
9 |
95 |
| Soybean |
42.4 |
2500 |
62 |
6 |
56 |
| Wheat |
44.3 |
1800 |
269 |
9 |
50 |
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Interpretation of the uncoupling in genetic diversity trends
- What do we expect?
- Evolutionary factors
- Domestication in a limited area
- What is an important difference between mutations with a
phenotypic advantage/disadvantage and neutral mutations?
- Probability of survival of mutant genes in large
populations
- Different evolutionary factors involved
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Evolutionary factors
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•Selection: effect on genetic diversity: ↓–
–
- Later dispersal
- Modern plant breeding, but…
• Genetic drift: effect on genetic diversity: ↓–
- Sampling during domestication
–
Mutation: effect on genetic diversity: ↑ or ↓–
Migration/hybridization:
effect on genetic diversity: ↑ or ↓
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Other causes of genetic erosion
- Genetic erosion: loss in genetic diversity, usually of crop
plants or domestic animals
- Causes:
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Potential effect of lack of diversity on crop disease status
Three examples
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Example 1: A recent wake-up
call:
Southern corn leaf blight (Helminthosporium maydis) epidemic
(1970)
- In 1970, country-wide epidemic leading to a loss of 15% of
corn production
- Started in Florida and moved northwards
- Leaf disease caused by a fungus, Helmintosporium
maydis
- Known to exist before the epidemic
- Only maize with T cytoplasm
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- Southern corn leaf blight epidemic (1970)
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- What is the T cytoplasm?
- Maize varieties = hybrid varieties to use heterosis:
A (female) x B (male)--> F1 with yield >> A or B
- To get high levels of hybrid seeds:
- traditional way: "detasselling"
- novel way: cytoplasmic sterility: gene in mtDNA
leads to male sterility --> no need to detassel; requires male
fertility
restorer gene in B to restore fertility in F1!
- New strain of H. maydis in 1969-1970:
- More virulent on maize lines with T cytoplasm
- Because utilization of T cytoplasm had become
widespread --> epidemic affecting most of U.S. corn belt
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Example 2: The rust (Hemileia
vastatrix) epidemic in coffee
- Coffea
arabica originated in Ethiopia (mountainous area!) but
coffee growing and brewing may have started in Ethiopia or Arabia.
When?
- First historical records: Yemen (14th century) -->
export via port of Mocha (limited to Yemen until 1700)
- First European coffee house: Venice (1615)
- Introduction of coffee elsewhere: live plants (non-dormant
seeds); Dutch: to India, Ceylon, and Java; French: to island of Bourbon
(Reunion) --> S. America (Colombia)
- Java --> Amsterdam --> Hawaii: Kona or Surinam -->
Brazil or Paris --> Martinique, Jamaica (Blue Mountain), etc.
- In 1868, Ceylon was the leading coffee producer (export of
100 million lbs); by 1885, no coffee could be exported
- leaf disease caused by a fungus, Hemileia vastatrix
- Java 1876; East Africa 1894; Brazil 1970
- made worse by limited diversity; highly variable
pathogen
- controlled by fungicides --> uneconomical in many
regions except where optimal climate
- genetic resistance: C.canephora (Robusta);
lower
quality: cheap blends and instant coffee
- replace by other crops: e.g., tea
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- Coffee leaves, flowers, berries
- Coffee bushes
- Coffee-growing region in Colombia
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Example 3:
Late blight in potato
- Introduced into Europe (Isle of Wight) in 1845 from
Americas
- Quick dispersal in the British islands and the continent;
in Ireland, major epidemics in 1845-46: island-wide potato failure
- Control measures known at that time: plant only every 6th
year, use clean seed tubers not connected to diseased field; do not
feed diseased tubers to stock w/o boiling
- Ireland = agricultural colony of Great Britain
- absentee (foreign) landlords - Irish serfs
- potato = major staple; wheat = export crop
- no major industries: elimination of competition with
GB; high unemployment
- 9 million people before epidemic; 1 million deaths:
starvation, diseases (cholera, typhus, etc.)
- 1.5 million emigrants after epidemic; 5.5 million
emigrants until WWI, many to U.S. East Coast (Boston!)
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How is uniformity of our crops evolving (Duvick 1984)?
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Lecture 13 Main Findings
- Major directions in crop evolution research:
- Identification of wild ancestor
- Comparison of wild ancestor and cultivated descendant
- What is genetic diversity and how do we measure it?
- Useful (phenotypic) traits: farmer, consumer
- Molecular markers: RAPDs, RFLPs, etc.
- Uncoupling of trends in genetic diversity at the molecular
and phenotypic levels. How do we explain that?
- Phenotypic traits: increase in diversity; molecular
markers: decrease in diversity
- Inevitable reduction in genetic diversity:
- domestication: selection, dispersal
- economic and cultural pressures
- Major difference between the two types of traits:
probability of survival in cultivated environment: favors survival of
phenotypic traits with major, "favorable" effect
- Why is genetic diversity important?
- The case of disease resistance: lack of diversity leads
to genetic vulnerability, i.e. development of large-scale disease
epidemics
- Limited progress from selection in breeding programs to
improve crops
- How diverse or uniform are our crops?
- Our crops are generally very uniform; however, there is
a reversal in longtime trend towards increased diversification, both in
space and time
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