More than one origin of hexaploid wheat is indicated by sequence comparison of low-copy DNA
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Genome
- Vol. 41 (3) , 402-407
- https://doi.org/10.1139/gen-41-3-402
Abstract
Allohexaploid bread wheat is grown on more acreage than any other cereal crop, yet variation at the DNA level seems to be less than that observed in many diploid crop species. A common explanation for the small amount of DNA-level variation is that a severe bottleneck event resulted from the polyploidization events that gave rise to hexaploid wheat, whereby wheat was genetically separated from its progenitors. In this report, we test the extent of the bottleneck separating wheat from its D-genome progenitor, Triticum tauschii, by comparative DNA sequence analysis. Restriction site variation of low-copy DNA sequences amplified by PCR showed an average of 2.9 and 2.4 alleles per primer set in T. tauschii and wheat, respectively. Two different restriction patterns were present in T. tauschii for DNA amplified with a primer set for the A1 locus. Both alleles were also present in wheat. Alleles at the A1 locus were cloned and 527 bp of sequence obtained from 12 and 13 diverse accessions of wheat and T. tauschii, respectively. Average genetic distance among the wheat alleles was similar to that among the T. tauschii alleles (0.0127 and 0.0133, respectively). Nucleotide differences indicated that two distinct alleles existed in T. tauschii, both of which were present in wheat. These data suggest that hexaploid wheat formed at least twice, and that the bottleneck separating wheat from T. tauschii may be less constrictive than previously supposed.Key words: wheat, evolution, DNA.Keywords
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