Genetic Architecture of Domestication-Related Traits in Maize

Author:

Xue Shang1,Bradbury Peter J2,Casstevens Terry3,Holland James B4

Affiliation:

1. Bioinformatics Research Center, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7614

2. U.S. Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service Plant, Soil, and Nutrition Research Unit, Ithaca, New York 14853

3. Institute for Genomic Diversity, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-2703

4. U.S. Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service Plant Science Research Unit and Department of Crop Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7620

Abstract

Abstract Strong directional selection occurred during the domestication of maize from its wild ancestor teosinte, reducing its genetic diversity, particularly at genes controlling domestication-related traits. Nevertheless, variability for some domestication-related traits is maintained in maize. The genetic basis of this could be sequence variation at the same key genes controlling maize–teosinte differentiation (due to lack of fixation or arising as new mutations after domestication), distinct loci with large effects, or polygenic background variation. Previous studies permit annotation of maize genome regions associated with the major differences between maize and teosinte or that exhibit population genetic signals of selection during either domestication or postdomestication improvement. Genome-wide association studies and genetic variance partitioning analyses were performed in two diverse maize inbred line panels to compare the phenotypic effects and variances of sequence polymorphisms in regions involved in domestication and improvement to the rest of the genome. Additive polygenic models explained most of the genotypic variation for domestication-related traits; no large-effect loci were detected for any trait. Most trait variance was associated with background genomic regions lacking previous evidence for involvement in domestication. Improvement sweep regions were associated with more trait variation than expected based on the proportion of the genome they represent. Selection during domestication eliminated large-effect genetic variants that would revert maize toward a teosinte type. Small-effect polygenic variants (enriched in the improvement sweep regions of the genome) are responsible for most of the standing variation for domestication-related traits in maize.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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