Abstract

BackgroundDomestication and breeding involve the selection of particular phenotypes, limiting the genomic diversity of the population and creating a bottleneck. These effects can be precisely estimated when the location of domestication is established. Few analyses have focused on understanding the genetic consequences of domestication and breeding in fruit trees. In this study, we aimed to analyse genetic structure and changes in the diversity in sweet cherry Prunus avium L.ResultsThree subgroups were detected in sweet cherry, with one group of landraces genetically very close to the analysed wild cherry population. A limited number of SSR markers displayed deviations from the frequencies expected under neutrality. After the removal of these markers from the analysis, a very limited bottleneck was detected between wild cherries and sweet cherry landraces, with a much more pronounced bottleneck between sweet cherry landraces and modern sweet cherry varieties. The loss of diversity between wild cherries and sweet cherry landraces at the S-locus was more significant than that for microsatellites. Particularly high levels of differentiation were observed for some S-alleles.ConclusionsSeveral domestication events may have happened in sweet cherry or/and intense gene flow from local wild cherry was probably maintained along the evolutionary history of the species. A marked bottleneck due to breeding was detected, with all markers, in the modern sweet cherry gene pool. The microsatellites did not detect the bottleneck due to domestication in the analysed sample. The vegetative propagation specific to some fruit trees may account for the differences in diversity observed at the S-locus. Our study provides insights into domestication events of cherry, however, requires confirmation on a larger sampling scheme for both sweet cherry landraces and wild cherry.

Highlights

  • Domestication and breeding involve the selection of particular phenotypes, limiting the genomic diversity of the population and creating a bottleneck

  • An analysis of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in 774 maize genes showing 2 to 4% of these genes had been subject to artificial selection [2]

  • Several domestication events may have happened in sweet cherry or/and intense gene flow from local wild cherry was probably maintained along the evolutionary history of the species

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Summary

Introduction

Domestication and breeding involve the selection of particular phenotypes, limiting the genomic diversity of the population and creating a bottleneck These effects can be precisely estimated when the location of domestication is established. The evolutionary history of a cultivated species results from a complex interaction between genetic and demographic factors. This history can be precisely rebuilt when the location of early. The second major impact is a bottleneck affecting the entire genome, due to the demographic sampling of individuals during domestication and breeding. The degree of diversity loss differs considerably between crop plants: 34% based on SNP diversity in soybean and 38% in maize, but as much as 70 to 90% in wheat (69% in bread wheat and 84% in durum wheat) and 80 to 90% in rice, depending on the sample studied and the molecular markers used [3,4,5,6]

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