Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.

Cultivated bananas are large, vegetatively-propagated members of the genus Musa. More than 1,000 cultivars are grown worldwide and they are major economic and food resources in numerous developing countries. It has been suggested that cultivated bananas originated from the islands of Southeast Asia...

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Main Authors: Lin-Feng Li, Hua-Ying Wang, Cui Zhang, Xin-Feng Wang, Feng-Xue Shi, Wen-Na Chen, Xue-Jun Ge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3832372?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-db17d6e63a6e4ee8b9d8e598cbe547932020-11-25T01:34:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e8050210.1371/journal.pone.0080502Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.Lin-Feng LiHua-Ying WangCui ZhangXin-Feng WangFeng-Xue ShiWen-Na ChenXue-Jun GeCultivated bananas are large, vegetatively-propagated members of the genus Musa. More than 1,000 cultivars are grown worldwide and they are major economic and food resources in numerous developing countries. It has been suggested that cultivated bananas originated from the islands of Southeast Asia (ISEA) and have been developed through complex geodomestication pathways. However, the maternal and parental donors of most cultivars are unknown, and the pattern of nucleotide diversity in domesticated banana has not been fully resolved.We studied the genetics of 16 cultivated and 18 wild Musa accessions using two single-copy nuclear (granule-bound starch synthase I, GBSS I, also known as Waxy, and alcohol dehydrogenase 1, Adh1) and two chloroplast (maturase K, matK, and the trnL-F gene cluster) genes. The results of phylogenetic analyses showed that all A-genome haplotypes of cultivated bananas were grouped together with those of ISEA subspecies of M. acuminata (A-genome). Similarly, the B- and S-genome haplotypes of cultivated bananas clustered with the wild species M. balbisiana (B-genome) and M. schizocarpa (S-genome), respectively. Notably, it has been shown that distinct haplotypes of each cultivar (A-genome group) were nested together to different ISEA subspecies M. acuminata. Analyses of nucleotide polymorphism in the Waxy and Adh1 genes revealed that, in comparison to the wild relatives, cultivated banana exhibited slightly lower nucleotide diversity both across all sites and specifically at silent sites. However, dramatically reduced nucleotide diversity was found at nonsynonymous sites for cultivated bananas.Our study not only confirmed the origin of cultivated banana as arising from multiple intra- and inter-specific hybridization events, but also showed that cultivated banana may have not suffered a severe genetic bottleneck during the domestication process. Importantly, our findings suggested that multiple maternal origins and a reduction in nucleotide diversity at nonsynonymous sites are general attributes of cultivated bananas.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3832372?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lin-Feng Li
Hua-Ying Wang
Cui Zhang
Xin-Feng Wang
Feng-Xue Shi
Wen-Na Chen
Xue-Jun Ge
spellingShingle Lin-Feng Li
Hua-Ying Wang
Cui Zhang
Xin-Feng Wang
Feng-Xue Shi
Wen-Na Chen
Xue-Jun Ge
Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lin-Feng Li
Hua-Ying Wang
Cui Zhang
Xin-Feng Wang
Feng-Xue Shi
Wen-Na Chen
Xue-Jun Ge
author_sort Lin-Feng Li
title Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
title_short Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
title_full Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
title_fullStr Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
title_full_unstemmed Origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
title_sort origins and domestication of cultivated banana inferred from chloroplast and nuclear genes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Cultivated bananas are large, vegetatively-propagated members of the genus Musa. More than 1,000 cultivars are grown worldwide and they are major economic and food resources in numerous developing countries. It has been suggested that cultivated bananas originated from the islands of Southeast Asia (ISEA) and have been developed through complex geodomestication pathways. However, the maternal and parental donors of most cultivars are unknown, and the pattern of nucleotide diversity in domesticated banana has not been fully resolved.We studied the genetics of 16 cultivated and 18 wild Musa accessions using two single-copy nuclear (granule-bound starch synthase I, GBSS I, also known as Waxy, and alcohol dehydrogenase 1, Adh1) and two chloroplast (maturase K, matK, and the trnL-F gene cluster) genes. The results of phylogenetic analyses showed that all A-genome haplotypes of cultivated bananas were grouped together with those of ISEA subspecies of M. acuminata (A-genome). Similarly, the B- and S-genome haplotypes of cultivated bananas clustered with the wild species M. balbisiana (B-genome) and M. schizocarpa (S-genome), respectively. Notably, it has been shown that distinct haplotypes of each cultivar (A-genome group) were nested together to different ISEA subspecies M. acuminata. Analyses of nucleotide polymorphism in the Waxy and Adh1 genes revealed that, in comparison to the wild relatives, cultivated banana exhibited slightly lower nucleotide diversity both across all sites and specifically at silent sites. However, dramatically reduced nucleotide diversity was found at nonsynonymous sites for cultivated bananas.Our study not only confirmed the origin of cultivated banana as arising from multiple intra- and inter-specific hybridization events, but also showed that cultivated banana may have not suffered a severe genetic bottleneck during the domestication process. Importantly, our findings suggested that multiple maternal origins and a reduction in nucleotide diversity at nonsynonymous sites are general attributes of cultivated bananas.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3832372?pdf=render
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