Dual Domestication, Diversity, and Differential Introgression in Old World Cotton Diploids

Author:

Grover Corrinne E1ORCID,Arick Mark A2ORCID,Thrash Adam2ORCID,Sharbrough Joel3ORCID,Hu Guanjing45ORCID,Yuan Daojun6ORCID,Snodgrass Samantha1ORCID,Miller Emma R1ORCID,Ramaraj Thiruvarangan7ORCID,Peterson Daniel G2ORCID,Udall Joshua A8ORCID,Wendel Jonathan F1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology Department, Iowa State University , Ames, Iowa 5001 , USA

2. Biocomputing & Biotechnology, Institute for Genomics, Mississippi State University , Mississippi , USA

3. Biology Department, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology , Socorro, New Mexico 87801 , USA

4. State Key Laboratory of Cotton Biology, Institute of Cotton Research, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Anyang 455000 , China

5. Shenzhen Branch, Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Genome Analysis Laboratory of the Ministry of Agriculture, Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Shenzhen 518120 , China

6. College of Plant Science and Technology, Huazhong Agricultural University , Wuhan Hubei 430070 , China

7. School of Computing, College of Computing and Digital Media, DePaul University , Chicago, Illinois 6060 , USA

8. Crop Germplasm Research Unit, USDA/Agricultural Research Service, 2881 F&B Road, College Station , Texas 77845 , USA

Abstract

AbstractDomestication in the cotton genus is remarkable in that it has occurred independently four different times at two different ploidy levels. Relatively little is known about genome evolution and domestication in the cultivated diploid species Gossypium herbaceum and Gossypium arboreum, due to the absence of wild representatives for the latter species, their ancient domestication, and their joint history of human-mediated dispersal and interspecific gene flow. Using in-depth resequencing of a broad sampling from both species, we provide support for their independent domestication, as opposed to a progenitor–derivative relationship, showing that diversity (mean π = 6 × 10−3) within species is similar, and that divergence between species is modest (FST = 0.413). Individual accessions were homozygous for ancestral single-nucleotide polymorphisms at over half of variable sites, while fixed, derived sites were at modest frequencies. Notably, two chromosomes with a paucity of fixed, derived sites (i.e., chromosomes 7 and 10) were also strongly implicated as having experienced high levels of introgression. Collectively, these data demonstrate variable permeability to introgression among chromosomes, which we propose is due to divergent selection under domestication and/or the phenomenon of F2 breakdown in interspecific crosses. Our analyses provide insight into the evolutionary forces that shape diversity and divergence in the diploid cultivated species and establish a foundation for understanding the contribution of introgression and/or strong parallel selection to the extensive morphological similarities shared between species.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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