Mittell Elizabeth A, Cobbold Christina A, Ijaz Umer Zeeshan, Kilbride Elizabeth A, Moore Karen A, Mable Barbara K
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine University of Glasgow Glasgow UK.
School of Biology University of St Andrews St Andrews UK.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Sep 24;10(20):11810-11825. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6821. eCollection 2020 Oct.
There has been growing emphasis on the role that crop wild relatives might play in supporting highly selected agriculturally valuable species in the face of climate change. In species that were domesticated many thousands of years ago, distinguishing wild populations from escaped feral forms can be challenging, but reintroducing variation from either source could supplement current cultivated forms. For economically important cabbages (Brassicaceae: ), "wild" populations occur throughout Europe but little is known about their genetic variation or potential as resources for breeding more resilient crop varieties. The main aim of this study was to characterize the population structure of geographically isolated wild cabbage populations along the coasts of the UK and Spain, including the Atlantic range edges. Double-digest restriction-site-associated DNA sequencing was used to sample individual cabbage genomes, assess the similarity of plants from 20 populations, and explore environment-genotype associations across varying climatic conditions. Interestingly, there were no indications of isolation by distance; several geographically close populations were genetically more distinct from each other than to distant populations. Furthermore, several distant populations shared genetic ancestry, which could indicate that they were established by escapees of similar source cultivars. However, there were signals of local adaptation to different environments, including a possible relationship between genetic diversity and soil pH. Overall, these results highlight wild cabbages in the Atlantic region as an important genetic resource worthy of further research into their relationship with existing crop varieties.
面对气候变化,人们越来越重视作物野生近缘种在支持高度选育的具有农业价值的物种方面可能发挥的作用。对于数千年前就已被驯化的物种而言,区分野生种群和逃逸的野生形态具有挑战性,但从这两种来源重新引入变异都可以补充当前的栽培品种。对于经济上重要的甘蓝(十字花科: ),“野生”种群遍布欧洲,但对其遗传变异或作为培育更具适应性作物品种资源的潜力了解甚少。本研究的主要目的是描述英国和西班牙沿海包括大西洋分布边缘在内的地理隔离野生甘蓝种群的种群结构。利用双酶切限制性位点相关DNA测序对单个甘蓝基因组进行采样,评估来自20个种群的植物的相似性,并探索不同气候条件下的环境-基因型关联。有趣的是,没有距离隔离的迹象;几个地理上相邻的种群在遗传上彼此之间的差异比与远处种群的差异更大。此外,几个远处的种群共享遗传祖先,这可能表明它们是由相似来源栽培品种的逃逸个体建立的。然而,存在对不同环境的局部适应信号,包括遗传多样性与土壤pH值之间可能的关系。总体而言,这些结果凸显了大西洋地区的野生甘蓝是一种重要的遗传资源,值得进一步研究它们与现有作物品种的关系。