Investigation of the bottleneck leading to the domestication of maize
- 14 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 95 (8) , 4441-4446
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.8.4441
Abstract
Maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) is genetically diverse, yet it is also morphologically distinct from its wild relatives. These two observations are somewhat contradictory: the first observation is consistent with a large historical population size for maize, but the latter observation is consistent with strong, diversity-limiting selection during maize domestication. In this study, we sampled sequence diversity, coupled with simulations of the coalescent process, to study the dynamics of a population bottleneck during the domestication of maize. To do this, we determined the DNA sequence of a 1,400-bp region of the Adh1 locus from 19 individuals representing maize, its presumed progenitor (Z. mays ssp. parviglumis), and a more distant relative (Zea luxurians). The sequence data were used to guide coalescent simulations of population bottlenecks associated with domestication. Our study confirms high genetic diversity in maize—maize contains 75% of the variation found in its progenitor and is more diverse than its wild relative, Z. luxurians—but it also suggests that sequence diversity in maize can be explained by a bottleneck of short duration and very small size. For example, the breadth of genetic diversity in maize is consistent with a founding population of only 20 individuals when the domestication event is 10 generations in length.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Caloramator viterbensis sp. nov., a novel thermophilic, glycerol-fermenting bacterium isolated from a hot spring in ItalyInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 2002
- Location, Location, Location: The First FarmersScience, 1997
- Genes from wild rice improve yieldNature, 1996
- Substitution rate comparisons between grasses and palms: synonymous rate differences at the nuclear gene Adh parallel rate differences at the plastid gene rbcL.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Intra- and interspecific variation of the alcohol dehydrogenase locus region in wild plants Arabis gemmifera and Arabidopsis thalianaMolecular Biology and Evolution, 1996
- Using Hitchhiking Genes to Study Adaptation and Divergence During Speciation Within the Drosophila melanogaster Species ComplexEvolution, 1994
- Adaptive protein evolution at the Adh locus in DrosophilaNature, 1991
- Isoenzymatic Variation in Zea (Gramineae)Systematic Botany, 1984
- From Teosinte to Maize: The Catastrophic Sexual TransmutationScience, 1983
- A simple method for estimating evolutionary rates of base substitutions through comparative studies of nucleotide sequencesJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1980