Singh Akanksha, Verma Ashwani Kumar, Tripathi Abhinandan Mani, Mishra Parneeta, Bag Sumit Kumar, Rajarammohan Sivasubramanian, Roy Sribash
Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Division, CSIR-National Botanical Research Institute, Luckow, Uttar Pradesh, 226001, India.
Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR), Ghaziabad, 201002, India.
BMC Plant Biol. 2025 Jul 29;25(1):980. doi: 10.1186/s12870-025-06944-6.
Deciphering the origin, demography and adaptation strategies of species are important goals of biologists. In this context, the model plant species Arabidopsis thaliana has been studied in details using regional and large scale global collections. However, these studies did not include Indian Himalayan populations. This might have restricted our current knowledge on the species. To understand the species evolution and demography in global scale vis-à-vis unexplored Indian Himalayan populations, we analysed 38 whole genome sequences of A. thaliana those are originated along a steep elevation gradient in the Himalayas along with the available largest global collections so far. Whole genome sequence analyses indicated existence four distinct sub-populations at different elevations in Indian Himalayan region. Unexpectedly, we observed the Indian population is more diverse than Eurasian populations and more importantly comparable with the known most diverse ancestor populations, the relicts. The genetic diversity of Indian populations was found to decrease towards east and west of its peripheral region. It might have evolved in the region without genomic admixture with Eurasian non-relicts, harbour large number of unique alleles, rare S-haplogroups with high frequency and without any recombinant S-haplogroup types. Like the relicts, Indian population follows geographic scales strong isolation by distance patterns. Along with our own findings and earlier observations we show that while one sub-population of African ancestors swept the most of the Euro-Asian regions, another one migrated towards east that contributed in the expansion of the species in its peripheral region particularly towards east. Our results add to the existing knowledge on the species demographic history across the globe. Background Arabidopsis thaliana has been extensively studied as a model species for understanding its origin, demography, population genetics, and epigenetics at regional and global scales. Comprehensive global studies, such as the 1001 Genomes Project, revealed that present-day A. thaliana originated from multiple glacial refugia, with non-relict populations widely expanding across geographic regions, though their origin in the Balkans and Black Sea areas and subsequent expansion to the Far East remain debated due to climatic variability. The Himalayan region presents a unique phyto-geography with diverse climatic conditions, ranging from subtropical to alpine, providing a biodiversity hotspot for diversification and speciation. However, global studies have largely excluded this region. This study analyzed 38 A. thaliana genomes from eight West-Himalayan populations in the context of global datasets to investigate the diversity, origin, and evolutionary history of these populations. The primary objectives were to explore the role of the Himalayan populations in global diversity and their potential contribution to the east-west expansion of A. thaliana, considering the region's vast climatic gradients. Result The analysis of 38 whole-genome sequences of Arabidopsis thaliana from the Indian Himalayas revealed four distinct sub-populations distributed along an elevation gradient. Indian populations exhibited higher genetic diversity than Eurasian populations, comparable to relict populations, and harbored unique alleles, rare S-haplogroups, and no recombinant S-haplogroups. Diversity decreased towards the east and west of the region, suggesting independent evolution without admixture from Eurasian non-relicts. Isolation-by-distance patterns were observed, similar to relicts. These findings indicate that Indian populations likely contributed to the species' eastward expansion and provide new insights into the global demographic history of A. thaliana. Conclusion Indian Himalayan populations of Arabidopsis thaliana exhibit high genetic diversity, comparable to relict populations, and likely evolved independently without admixture from Eurasian non-relicts. These findings highlight their significant role in the species' eastward expansion and global demographic history.
解读物种的起源、种群统计学及适应策略是生物学家的重要目标。在此背景下,已利用区域和大规模全球样本对模式植物物种拟南芥进行了详细研究。然而,这些研究未涵盖印度喜马拉雅地区的种群。这可能限制了我们目前对该物种的了解。为了在全球范围内了解该物种的进化和种群统计学情况,同时对比未被探索的印度喜马拉雅地区种群,我们分析了38个拟南芥全基因组序列,这些序列来自喜马拉雅地区沿陡峭海拔梯度分布的种群,同时还纳入了目前可获取的最大规模全球样本。全基因组序列分析表明,在印度喜马拉雅地区不同海拔存在四个不同的亚种群。出乎意料的是,我们观察到印度种群比欧亚种群更加多样化,更重要的是,可与已知的最多样化的祖先种群即残遗种群相媲美。印度种群的遗传多样性在其边缘区域的东西两侧呈现下降趋势。它可能在该地区独立进化,未与欧亚非残遗种群发生基因组混合,拥有大量独特等位基因、高频出现的罕见S单倍型类群,且没有任何重组S单倍型类型。与残遗种群一样,印度种群呈现出地理尺度上明显的距离隔离模式。结合我们自己的研究结果和早期观察,我们发现,当非洲祖先的一个亚种群席卷了大部分欧亚地区时,另一个亚种群向东迁移,这对该物种在其边缘区域尤其是向东的扩张起到了推动作用。我们的研究结果丰富了关于该物种全球种群历史的现有知识。背景拟南芥作为一种模式物种,已在区域和全球尺度上被广泛研究,以了解其起源、种群统计学、群体遗传学和表观遗传学。全面的全球研究,如1001基因组计划,揭示了当今的拟南芥起源于多个冰川避难所,非残遗种群在地理区域广泛扩张,尽管由于气候变异性,它们在巴尔干半岛和黑海地区的起源以及随后向远东地区扩张仍存在争议。喜马拉雅地区呈现出独特的植物地理学特征,气候条件多样,从亚热带到高山气候都有,为物种分化和形成提供了生物多样性热点地区。然而,全球研究在很大程度上排除了该地区。本研究在全球数据集的背景下分析了来自喜马拉雅西部八个种群的38个拟南芥基因组,以调查这些种群的多样性、起源和进化历史。主要目标是探讨喜马拉雅种群在全球多样性中的作用及其对拟南芥东西向扩张的潜在贡献,同时考虑到该地区巨大的气候梯度。结果对来自印度喜马拉雅地区的38个拟南芥全基因组序列的分析揭示了四个沿海拔梯度分布的不同亚种群。印度种群表现出比欧亚种群更高的遗传多样性,与残遗种群相当,并且拥有独特等位基因、罕见S单倍型类群,且没有重组S单倍型类群。该地区东西两侧的多样性降低,表明其独立进化,未与欧亚非残遗种群混合。观察到距离隔离模式,与残遗种群相似。这些发现表明印度种群可能对该物种的向东扩张做出了贡献,并为拟南芥的全球种群历史提供了新的见解。结论印度喜马拉雅地区的拟南芥种群表现出高遗传多样性,与残遗种群相当,并且可能独立进化,未与欧亚非残遗种群混合。这些发现突出了它们在该物种向东扩张和全球种群历史中的重要作用。