Maintenance and expansion of genetic and trait variation following domestication in a clonal crop

Author:

White Oliver W.1ORCID,Biswas Manosh Kumar2ORCID,Abebe Wendawek M.3,Dussert Yann45ORCID,Kebede Firew3,Nichols Richard A.5ORCID,Buggs Richard J. A.15ORCID,Demissew Sebsebe6,Woldeyes Feleke7,Papadopulos Alexander S. T.8ORCID,Schwarzacher Trude29ORCID,Heslop‐Harrison Pat J. S.29ORCID,Wilkin Paul1ORCID,Borrell James S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Richmond UK

2. Department of Genetics and Genome Biology University of Leicester Leicester UK

3. Department of Biology Hawassa University Hawassa Ethiopia

4. CNRS Université de Poitiers, EBI Poitiers France

5. School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences Queen Mary University of London London UK

6. Department of Biology Addis Ababa University Addis Ababa Ethiopia

7. Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute Addis Ababa Ethiopia

8. Schools of Natural Sciences University of Bangor Gwynedd UK

9. Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization/Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Botany, South China Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractClonal propagation enables favourable crop genotypes to be rapidly selected and multiplied. However, the absence of sexual propagation can lead to low genetic diversity and accumulation of deleterious mutations, which may eventually render crops less resilient to pathogens or environmental change. To better understand this trade‐off, we characterize the domestication and contemporary genetic diversity of Enset (Ensete ventricosum), an indigenous African relative of bananas (Musa) and a principal starch staple for 20 million Ethiopians. Wild enset reproduction occurs strictly by sexual outcrossing, but for cultivation, it is propagated clonally and associated with diversification and specialization into hundreds of named landraces. We applied tGBS sequencing to generate genome‐wide genotypes for 192 accessions from across enset's cultivated distribution, and surveyed 1340 farmers on enset agronomic traits. Overall, reduced heterozygosity in the domesticated lineage was consistent with a domestication bottleneck that retained 37% of wild diversity. However, an excess of putatively deleterious missense mutations at low frequency present as heterozygotes suggested an accumulation of mutational load in clonal domesticated lineages. Our evidence indicates that the major domesticated lineages initially arose through historic sexual recombination associated with a domestication bottleneck, followed by the amplification of favourable genotypes through an extended period of clonal propagation. Among domesticated lineages, we found a significant phylogenetic signal for multiple farmer‐identified food, nutrition and disease resistance traits and little evidence of contemporary recombination. The development of future‐climate adapted genotypes may require crop breeding, but outcrossing risks exposing deleterious alleles as homozygotes. This trade‐off may partly explain the ubiquity and persistence of clonal propagation over recent centuries of comparative climate stability.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference82 articles.

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