6533b829fe1ef96bd12899cb
RESEARCH PRODUCT
European traditional tomatoes galore: a result of farmers' selection of a few diversity-rich loci
Jose BlancaClara PonsJavier Montero-pauDavid Sanchez-matarredonaPeio ZiarsoloLilian FontanetJosef FisherMariola PlazasJoan CasalsJose Luis RamblaAlessandro RicciniSamuela PombarellaAlessandra RuggieroMaria SulliStephania GrilloAngelos KanellisGiovanni GiulianoRichard FinkersMaria CammareriSilvana GrandilloAndrea MazzucatoMathilde CausseMaria José DíezJaime ProhensDani ZamirJoaquin CañizaresAntonio J. MonforteAntonio GranellAriel Vicentesubject
LDQTLPhysiologySLCFruit morphologyMicrobiologiaPlant SciencePortes-lès-ValenceSLLquantitative trait locusSolanum lycopersicumsingle nucleotide polymorphismCrop evolution; diversification; fruit morphology; genome-wide association study; genotyping by sequencing; selection; single nucleotide polymorphismGWASLSLSolanum pimpinellifolium HM ClauseCrop evolutionFarmersSPSolanum lycopersicum var. cerasiformeTomàquets--Conreuminimum allele frequencyMAFPhenotypeDiversificationGenotyping by sequencinglong shelf-lifeGenome-wide association studydiversificationSNPselectionprincipal coordinate analysesGBSFrance Crop evolutionPolymorphism Single Nucleotidegenotyping by sequencingLife ScienceHumansPCoA:Enginyeria agroalimentària::Agricultura::Producció vegetal [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]SelectionAllelesfruit morphologyGenetic VariationEcologia[SDV.BV.AP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology/Plant breedingPlant BreedingSolanum lycopersicum L. var. lycopersicumlinkage disequilibriumTomatoes--VarietiesGenome-Wide Association Studydescription
A comprehensive collection of 1254 tomato accessions, corresponding to European traditional and modern varieties, early domesticated varieties, and wild relatives, was analyzed by genotyping by sequencing. A continuous genetic gradient between the traditional and modern varieties was observed. European traditional tomatoes displayed very low genetic diversity, with only 298 polymorphic loci (95% threshold) out of 64 943 total variants. European traditional tomatoes could be classified into several genetic groups. Two main clusters consisting of Spanish and Italian accessions showed higher genetic diversity than the remaining varieties, suggesting that these regions might be independent secondary centers of diversity with a different history. Other varieties seem to be the result of a more recent complex pattern of migrations and hybridizations among the European regions. Several polymorphic loci were associated in a genome-wide association study with fruit morphological traits in the European traditional collection. The corresponding alleles were found to contribute to the distinctive phenotypic characteristic of the genetic varietal groups. The few highly polymorphic loci associated with morphological traits in an otherwise a low-diversity population suggests a history of balancing selection, in which tomato farmers likely maintained the morphological variation by inadvertently applying a high selective pressure within different varietal types.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2022-03-31 | J Exp Bot |