Phylogeographic Evidence of Crop Neodiversity in Sorghum

Author:

de Alencar Figueiredo L F12,Calatayud C1,Dupuits C3,Billot C1,Rami J-F1,Brunel D3,Perrier X1,Courtois B1,Deu M1,Glaszmann J-C1

Affiliation:

1. Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement, UMR Développement et Amélioration des Plantes, Montpellier F-34398, France

2. Universidade Católica de Brasília, Brasília 70790-160, Brazil and

3. Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UR Etude du Polymorphisme des Génomes Végétaux, Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique--Institut de Génomique--Centre National de Génotypage, Evry F-91057, France

Abstract

Abstract Sorghum has shown the adaptability necessary to sustain its improvement during time and geographical extension despite a genetic foundation constricted by domestication bottlenecks. Initially domesticated in the northeastern part of sub-Saharan Africa several millenia ago, sorghum quickly spread throughout Africa, and to Asia. We performed phylogeographic analysis of sequence diversity for six candidate genes for grain quality (Shrunken2, Brittle2, Soluble starch synthaseI, Waxy, Amylose extender1, and Opaque2) in a representative sample of sorghum cultivars. Haplotypes along 1-kb segments appeared little affected by recombination. Sequence similarity enabled clustering of closely related alleles and discrimination of two or three distantly related groups depending on the gene. This scheme indicated that sorghum domestication involved structured founder populations, while confirming a specific status for the guinea margaritiferum subrace. Allele rooted genealogy revealed derivation relationships by mutation or, less frequently, by recombination. Comparison of germplasm compartments revealed contrasts between genes. Sh2, Bt2, and SssI displayed a loss of diversity outside the area of origin of sorghum, whereas O2 and, to some extent, Wx and Ae1 displayed novel variation, derived from postdomestication mutations. These are likely to have been conserved under the effect of human selection, thus releasing valuable neodiversity whose extent will influence germplasm management strategies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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