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European Vintage tomatoes galore: a result of farmers combinatorial assorting/swapping of a few diversity rich loci

Authors :
Dani Zamir
Clara Pons
Andrea Mazzucato
Stephania Grillo
Mathilde Causse
Peio Ziarsolo
Maria Cammareri
Silvana Grandillo
Angelos K. Kanellis
Mariola Plazas
Antonio J. Monforte
José Blanca
Maria Sulli
Javier Montero-Pau
Alessandro Riccini
Joan Casals
Lilian Fontanet
Giovanni Giuliano
Samuela Pombarelli
Antonio Granell
Josef Fisher
David Sanchez-Matarredona
Jaime Prohens
Joaquín Cañizares
María José Díez
Richard Finkers
José Luis Rambla
Alessandra Ruggiero
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

A comprehensive collection of 1,254 tomato accessions corresponding to European heirlooms and landraces, together with modern varieties, early domesticates and wild relatives, were analyzed by genotyping by sequencing. A continuous genetic gradient between the vintage and modern varieties was observed. European vintage tomatoes displayed very low genetic diversity, with only 298 loci out of 64,943 variants being polymorphic at the 95% threshold. European vintage tomatoes could be classified in several genetic groups. Two main clusters consisting of Spanish and Italian accessions showed a higher genetic diversity than the rest varieties, suggesting that these regions might be independent secondary centers of diversity and 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 GWAS with fruit morphological traits in the European vintage collection, and 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 diversity-poor genome suggests a history of balancing selection, in which tomato farmers maintained the morphological variation by applying a high selective pressure within different varietal types.HighlightThe high phenotypic diversity observed among European vintage varieties was created by traditional farmers by combining very few polymorphic loci subjected to balancing selection.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a3105a58747ed21b01a4169710bd81e4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.10.26.465840