Unraveling the Complex Hybrid Ancestry and Domestication History of Cultivated Strawberry

Author:

Hardigan Michael A1,Lorant Anne1,Pincot Dominique D A1,Feldmann Mitchell J1,Famula Randi A1,Acharya Charlotte B1,Lee Seonghee2,Verma Sujeet2,Whitaker Vance M2,Bassil Nahla3,Zurn Jason3,Cole Glenn S1,Bird Kevin4,Edger Patrick P4,Knapp Steven J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA

2. IFAS Gulf Coast Research and Education Center, Department of Horticulture, University of Florida, Wimauma, FL 33598, USA

3. USDA-ARS, National Clonal Germplasm Repository, Corvallis, OR 92182, USA

4. Department of Horticultural Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA

Abstract

Abstract Cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) is one of our youngest domesticates, originating in early eighteenth-century Europe from spontaneous hybrids between wild allo-octoploid species (Fragaria chiloensis and Fragaria virginiana). The improvement of horticultural traits by 300 years of breeding has enabled the global expansion of strawberry production. Here, we describe the genomic history of strawberry domestication from the earliest hybrids to modern cultivars. We observed a significant increase in heterozygosity among interspecific hybrids and a decrease in heterozygosity among domesticated descendants of those hybrids. Selective sweeps were found across the genome in early and modern phases of domestication—59–76% of the selectively swept genes originated in the three less dominant ancestral subgenomes. Contrary to the tenet that genetic diversity is limited in cultivated strawberry, we found that the octoploid species harbor massive allelic diversity and that F. × ananassa harbors as much allelic diversity as either wild founder. We identified 41.8 M subgenome-specific DNA variants among resequenced wild and domesticated individuals. Strikingly, 98% of common alleles and 73% of total alleles were shared between wild and domesticated populations. Moreover, genome-wide estimates of nucleotide diversity were virtually identical in F. chiloensis,F. virginiana, and F. × ananassa (π = 0.0059–0.0060). We found, however, that nucleotide diversity and heterozygosity were significantly lower in modern F. × ananassa populations that have experienced significant genetic gains and have produced numerous agriculturally important cultivars.

Funder

United Stated Department of Agriculture

National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Specialty Crops Research Initiative

California Strawberry Commission

USDA NIFA Postdoctoral Research Fellowship

USDA-ARS Small Fruit Crop Germplasm Committee

USDA-NIFA

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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