Abstract

Inflorescence capacity plays a crucial role in reproductive fitness in plants, and in production of hybrid crops. Maize is a monoecious species bearing separate male and female flowers (tassel and ear, respectively). The switch from open-pollinated populations of maize to hybrid-based breeding schemes in the early 20th century was accompanied by a dramatic reduction in tassel size, and the trend has continued with modern breeding over the recent decades. The goal of this study was to identify selection signatures in genes that may underlie this dramatic transformation. Using a population of 942 diverse inbred maize accessions and a nested association mapping population comprising three 200-line biparental populations, we measured 15 tassel morphological characteristics by manual and image-based methods. Genome-wide association studies identified 242 single nucleotide polymorphisms significantly associated with measured traits. We compared 41 unselected lines from the Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic (BSSS) population to 21 highly selected lines developed by modern commercial breeding programs, and found that tassel size and weight were reduced significantly. We assayed genetic differences between the two groups using three selection statistics: cross population extended haplotype homozogysity, cross-population composite likelihood ratio, and fixation index. All three statistics show evidence of selection at genomic regions associated with tassel morphology relative to genome-wide null distributions. These results support the tremendous effect, both phenotypic and genotypic, that selection has had on maize male inflorescence morphology.

Highlights

  • Inflorescence capacity plays a crucial role in reproductive fitness in plants, and in production of hybrid crops

  • Tassel morphology of modern commercial inbred lines, which are used as parents of single cross hybrids grown in the United States Corn Belt, is dramatically different from tassel morphology seen in the open-pollinated varieties of the pre-hybrid era

  • We demonstrate that tassel morphology has been continually modified, with length-related traits increasing and branchiness traits decreasing

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Summary

Introduction

Inflorescence capacity plays a crucial role in reproductive fitness in plants, and in production of hybrid crops. We compared 41 unselected lines from the Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic (BSSS) population to 21 highly selected lines developed by modern commercial breeding programs, and found that tassel size and weight were reduced significantly. The transition to single-cross hybrids was largely driven by key founder lines (B14, B37, and B73) derived from a pivotal maize population called Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic (BSSS), which was created in the 1930s by intermating 16 inbred lines (Lamkey et al 1991; Reif et al 2005). We observe an enrichment of selection statistic scores in regions containing SNPs associated with tassel morphological traits, a finding that is consistent across three different selection statistics

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